1st January: Psalm 119:105-112 
We  begin the year with the words of verse 105: 'Your Word is a lamp to my  feet and a light to my path'. This a great text with which to begin the  year. It is a great starting-point for these studies in God's Word. As  we journey through life with God and His Word, we discover that there is  a Word from the Lord for every part of life's journey. There is never a  time when God has nothing to say to His people. Sometimes, He speaks to  us from places which seem rather unlikely. As we explore His Word, we  learn that He is the true and living God, ever ready to bring to us  something new, something fresh, something that will send us on our way  rejoicing, something that will strengthen our faith, something to deepen  our commitment to Christ, something to increase our love for the  Saviour. As we receive God's Word - 'a lamp to our feet and a light to  our path' - we are to pray, 'renew my life, O Lord, according to Your  Word' (107). 
2nd January: Psalm 23:1-6 
Turning  to 'the Shepherd Psalm', we focus our attention on verse 5: 'You  prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. You anoint my  head with oil; my cup overflows'. We are to feast on God's Word. We are  to be filled with God's Spirit. The 'table' is the place of feasting.  'Oil' is a symbol of the Holy Spirit. As we feast on God's Word, we will  have good cause to say, again and again, 'God is good': His 'goodness  and love will follow me all the days of my life' (6). The Lord never  fails us. He always comes with His life-giving Word, the Word of life,  through which our life on earth becomes the beginning of life eternal,  the pathway to a life in which the fullness of God's love will be  revealed in a way that we can hardly begin to imagine: 'I will dwell in  the house of the Lord forever' (6). This is what Christ is preparing for  us (John 14:2)! 
3rd January: Psalm 42:1-11 
As  we read God's Word day-by-day, we are to pray for an increase of our  desire for God: 'My soul thirsts for God, for the living God' (2). This  is the spiritual experience, referred to in verse 7: 'Deep calls to  deep'. This is what Paul speaks of in 1 Corinthians 2:10 - Through His  Spirit, God is at work in us, revealing to us 'the deep things of God.  God has given us His Spirit for this reason - 'that we may understand  what God has freely given us' (1 Cor.2:12). God wants us to explore,  with Him, the meaning of the great salvation which He has so graciously  provided for us in Jesus Christ. Learning of God's salvation, we will  say with the Psalmist, 'I will yet praise Him, my Saviour and my God'  (11). This song of praise will grow strong in both our personal  devotions - 'a prayer to the God of my life' (8) - and our public  worship - going 'to the house of God' (4). 
4th January: Genesis 1:1-3 
'Genesis' means 'beginning'. These opening verses challenge us to get our priorities right - (a) The priority of God (1). God comes first. Before anyone else is mentioned, He is there. (b) The priority of God's Word (3). God is the first to speak. Before any human word is spoken, there is the Word of the Lord. (c) The priority of God's Spirit (2). All was 'empty', all was 'darkness', yet the 'Spirit of God' was  at work, and transformation was set in motion. Here, we have God's  priorities, set out in the Bible's first three verses - Putting God  first and listening to His Word, we are to pray for the moving of God's  Spirit, 'hovering over' our lives to transform them. For those who make  God's priorities their own, there is a promise of great blessing (Psalm  1:1-2). It is the great blessing of knowing Jesus Christ, our Saviour,  as 'God with us' (Matthew 1.23). 
5th January: Genesis 1:4-13 
God  speaks, and it is done (3,6-7,11). God is pleased with what He has done  (4,10, 12). This is the pattern of God's original creation. It is to be  the pattern of our life as a 'new creation' (2 Corintinians 5:17). God  speaks to us and we say, 'Your will be done' (Matthew 6:10). We say,  'let it be to me according to Your Word' (Luke 1:38). God looks on such  obedience, this 'walking in the Spirit' (Galatians 5:16, 22-23), and He  sees that it is 'good' (Micah 6:8). In these verses we read of the  separation of the light and the darkness, the separation of the waters  and the dry land, and the fruitfulness of God's creation. There are  lessons for us here. We are to 'walk in the light' (1 John 1:7). We are  to to the Spirit's 'living water' flow in us (John 7:39-39). Walking in  the light, letting the living water flow - this is the way of  fruitfulness. 
6th January: Genesis 1:14-25 
The  Bible's opening chapter is a great hymn of praise, emphasizing that all  things have been created for the glory of God (Revelation 4:11).  Nothing can be permitted to distract our attention from the Lord. He  alone is worthy of worship. The creation of the 'lights' makes no  reference to the sun and the moon. These were worshipped by neighbouring  peoples. They are not gods. They are simply 'lights'. Our worship is to  be given to God alone. The waters teemed with living creatures. The  land produced living creatures. Here, we have a picture of life. There  is life where the living water of the Spirit is flowing freely among  God's people (Ezekiel 47:5-9). This water brings life to the land  (Ezekiel 47:12). Moving with the flow of God's Spirit, we are to pray  that 'the water of life' will flow freely 'for the healing of the  nations' (Revelation 22:2). 
7th January: Genesis 1:26-2:3 
We  now come to the creation of humanity, male and female. Our creation is  described in a distinctive way - created in the image of God (26-27). We  are different from the rest of creation. We have been given dominion  over 'all the earth' and 'every living creature' (26,28). We are  different from God. He is the Creator. We are His creation. Created in  God's image, we have been created by Him and for Him. Though we have  sinned (see Genesis 3, Romans 3:23), now - in Jesus Christ - we have  begun to live as a new creation (Ephesians 4:22-24; Colossians 3:9-10).  The Bible teaches us that Jesus Christ is God (John 1:1) and that 'all  things were created by Him and for Him' (Colossians 1:16). This is the  Saviour who is at work in us, enabling us to live as a new creation!  Creation has been 'completed' (2:1). Salvation will be completed  (Philippians 1:6)! 
8th January: Genesis 2:4-14 
We  read of 'the breath of life', producing 'a living being' (7). Separated  from God through our sin, we have become spiritually dead (Ephesians  4:18; 2:1), we have been 'born again', 'born of the Spirit'. This new  birth is brought about by the breath of life, the wind of the Spirit  (John 3:5-8). As the river watered the garden (2:10), so our lives are  to be watered by 'the river' which flows 'from the throne of God and of  the Lamb' (Revelation 22:1). As we read of the 'tree' which features in  our fall into sin (2:9; 3:2-6), our thoughts turn also to the 'tree'  which forms the foundation of our salvation - Christ 'Himself bore our  sins in His body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for  righteousness' (1 Peter 2:24). In our hearts, we say, 'God forbid that I  should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ' (Galatians  6:14). 
9th January: Genesis 2:15-17 
We  noted, in 1:1-3, the importance of getting our priorities right - God,  God's Word, God's Spirit. Here, we emphasize the importance of these  priorities. We are under God. We must remember that He is God (15). We  are to obey God's Word (16). Here we learn that the act of obedience is  an act of freedom. In Christ, we are set free to obey God. God says,  'You are free to eat from any tree in the garden'. He does not then say,  'You are free to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil'.  He says, 'You must not'. The act of disobedience is not an act of  freedom. By choosing the way of sin, we show that we are in bondage. We  are not free. We are the captives of sin, and we need to be set free -  by Christ (John 8:32,36). We come to know God, choosing good rather than  evil, as we follow the way of God's Spirit (Galatians 5:16; Hebrews  5:14). 
10th January: Genesis 2:18-25 
We  come here to the creation of woman. Her creation is bound up with the  creation of man. She is created from man's 'rib' (21-22). The 'rib' is  taken from his side, emphasizing that man and woman are to be together,  side-by-side, not one in front of the other. The 'rib', rather than the  head or the feet, emphasizes this togetherness rather than any  superiority-inferiority relationship. The 'rib' is close to the heart.  Woman is close to the heart of man. Both are close to the heart of God.  The contrast between humanity and the animals is again clear. Among the  animals, there was 'no suitable helper' for the man (20). The animals  had been 'formed out of the ground' (19). Humanity has come from 'the  breath of life' (7). Like the animals, we come from 'the dust of the  ground', but there is more: the Breath of God, created in His image to  glorify Him! 
11th January: Genesis 3:1-5 
We  have read about the beginning of creation (1:1). Now we come to the  beginning of sin. In these verses, we have temptation. Note that  temptation is not sin. It only becomes sin when we do what the tempter  suggests (6). Temptation comes from 'that ancient serpent called the  devil or Satan' (Revelation 12:9). Satan reverses the priorities of God,  God's Word and God's Spirit. God is 'our Father' (Matthew 6:9). Satan  is the father of lies (John 8:44). Satan quotes and questions God's Word  (1). He not only questions God's Word . He contradicts it (4). Satan is  spiritual, an evil spirit. We must be aware of his schemes, and , in  Christ, we must take our stand against his schemes (2 Corinthians 2:11;  Ephesians 6:11). When Satan says, 'Did God really say?' (1), we must  wage war for God, filled with His Word and Spirit (2 Corinthians  10:3-5). 
12th January: Genesis 3:6-9 
Once  we were innocent. Now we are guilty. The story of Adam and Eve is  repeated over and over again. This is our story as well as Adam and  Eve's story. Even in the face of sin, we see something else. We see the  God of love, seeking to restore the fallen to Himself. In His words,  'Where are you?', we catch an early glimpse of the Gospel of salvation:  'the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost' (Luke 19:10).  Adam and Eve had lost their way. Now, God was looking for them to bring  them back to Himself. In the question, 'Where are you?', there is the  searching question, 'What have you done?', but there is also the  passionate appeal, 'Will you not return to me?'. This is the call of  mercy: 'Softly and tenderly, Jesus is calling, Calling, "O sinner, come  home"' (Sacred Songs & Solos, 414). Our loving Father is waiting patiently to welcome the returning prodigal (Luke 15:20). 
13th January: Genesis 3:10-15 
Having  chosen the way of sin, we are 'naked' and ashamed (10). The Gospel  teaches us that 'there's a way back to God from the dark paths of sin'.  We can be clothed with the righteousness of Christ. We can bring the  'filthy rags' of 'our righteous acts' (Isaiah 64:6) to God, and we can  exchange them for the perfect righteousness of Christ (2 Corinthians  5:21). Putting our trust in Christ, we need not be ashamed in God's  presence (Romans 10:11). There must be no 'passing the buck' - the man  blaming the woman, the woman blaming the serpent (12-13). We are to  confess our sins and receive God's forgiveness (1 John 1:9). This  forgiveness comes to us through the Cross where the suffering Saviour  becomes the victorious Victor and the subtle serpent became the defeated  devil. This is the message of verse 15: through the Cross, God has  provided for us a full salvation! 
Tues. 14th January: Genesis 3:16-24 
Sin  has consequences. Human life could never be the same once sin had  entered it. The effects of sin can be seen in the whole of life. The  most profound effect of sin is summed up in verse 22. We cannot reach  out our hands and take hold of eternal life. There is no way to heaven  which begins with the word 'I'. We must begin with God - 'God so loved  the world...' (John 3:16). No sinner can open the door of heaven:  'Christ only could unlock the gate of heaven, and let us in'. Sin leads  not to heaven but to 'death'. If we insist on trying to get to heaven by  our own good works, we will earn our 'wages' - 'the wages of sin is  death'. Come as a sinner to Jesus. Come to Him, saying, 'Nothing in my  hand I bring, simply to Thy Cross I cling' ( Church Hymnary, 83).  Look to Him alone for salvation, and know the truth of God's Word: 'the  gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord' (Romans 6:23). 
15th January: Matthew 1:1-17 
From  the beginning of the Old Testament, we move to the beginning of the New  Testament. This may be the beginning of the New Testament, but it is  not the beginning of God's revelation. It is not the beginning of His  redemption. The birth of Christ is the continuation of the history of  salvation, recorded in the Old Testament. Matthew takes us back to  Abraham (1-2; Genesis 12:1-3). Recalling the great events of the Old  Testament, he takes us through forty-two generations. This history is  the story of God's grace. We may illustrate this with two striking  examples. Rahab (5) was a 'prostitute', yet, by the grace of God,  through faith, she also takes her place with the people of God (Hebrews  11:31; Ephesians 2:8). The story of David and Uriah's wife (6) is a  story of deceit (2 Samuel 11) - 'where sin increased, grace increased  all the more' (Romans 5:20)! 
16th January: Matthew 1:18-25 
The  birth of Christ is a fulfilment of prophecy: 'The virgin will be with  child and will give birth to a Son, and they will call Him Immanuel'  (23; Isaiah 7:14). Christ is 'God with us'. He was born through the  power of the Holy Spirit (18,20). He is still 'God with us', when we are  'born of the Spirit' (John 3:5). Some people do not believe what the  Bible says here. They do not like the idea of a 'virgin birth'. The  Bible gives no encouragement to such unbelief. Matthew simply says,  'This is the way it happened' (18). In view of the amazing thing God was  doing - sending His Son to be the Saviour of the World - why should we  doubt that God took things out of man's hands and worked in His own  miraculous way? We rejoice not only in the miracle but also in its  saving purpose: 'He will save His people from their sins' (21). 
17th January: Matthew 2:1-6 
We  think of this chapter as 'the story of the wise men'. It is not so much  about the wise men. It is about Jesus. He is the central character. We  are not told how many wise men there were. The word, 'three' does not  appear (1). We are not told their names. We are not told exactly where  they came from - just, they came 'from the East' (1). The important  thing is that they made their journey. They came, seeking Jesus: 'Where  is he...?'. They came 'to worship Him' (2). The wise men were led to  Jesus not only by 'His star' (2) but also by the Scriptures. When asked  where the child was to be born, they answered by quoting from the  Scriptures (5-6; Micah 5:2). Wise men are still led to Christ through  the Scriptures. Reading the Scriptures, we become wise for salvation as  we find Christ who is our Wisdom (2 Timothy 3:15; 1 Corinthians 1:30). 
18th January: Matthew 2:7-12 
Bethlehem  was a 'little town'. Humanly speaking, it did not have any great  importance. Its importance is derived from the fact that it was the  birth place of our Saviour. When we think of Bethlehem, we do not think  so much of the place as the Saviour who was born there. Herod says that  he wants to go to Bethlehem to worship Jesus (8). Satan was speaking  through Herod. Satan has no intention of worshipping God, and neither  had Herod. Satan 'comes only to steal and kill and destroy'. Christ  comes to give 'life...to the full' (John 10:10). As the story unfolds,  it becomes clear that Herod was not a worshipper of Christ but a servant  of Satan. The wise men worship Jesus, then they return to their own  country. We know nothing about their return journey, their destination  or their life in their own country. Their whole purpose was to point  away from themselves to Jesus. 
19th January: Matthew 2:13-23 
The  story unfolds according to God's saving purpose and not Herod's Satanic  schemes. Herod dies. Jesus lives. The purpose of man is defeated. The  purpose of God prevails. Jesus' time in Egypt is full of prophetic  significance (15; Hosea 11:1). Egypt was the place of bondage. God turns  everything around, making it the place of protection (Exodus 1:11;  13-15). The emphasis is not on the place. It is on what God is doing, as  He fulfils His purpose. From Bethlehem to Egypt and then to Nazareth -  the young Jesus is being taken from place to place - all in the perfect  plan of God. Again, the emphasis is not on the place but on God's  purpose. Nazareth was a humble place, dignified by the fact that God  chose it to be the home of His Son. Our concern is not with wise men or  famous places. 'Turn your eyes upon Jesus'. 'Stand amazed in the  presence of Jesus'. 
20th January: Psalm 1:1-6 
As  well as journeying through the Old and New Testaments, we will read a  Psalm at fairly regular intervals. The first Psalm contrasts two ways -  the way of the Word and the way of the world, the way of blessing and  the way of judgment. Encouraging us to build upon the solid foundation  of God's Word, the opening Psalm sets the tone for what is to follow. To  whet your appetite for the Psalms, here are some early lessons:  stability in the Lord (1:1-2); service for the Lord (2:11); salvation of  the Lord (3:8); sanctification from the Lord (4:4-5); singing to the  Lord (8:4); strength in the Lord (9:9). These are some of the blessings  promised to those who 'delight in the law of the Lord' (1-2). With a God  like this - full of so much blessing for us - what else can we do but  rejoice in Him? 
21st January: Genesis 4:1-5 
The  name of Abel appears among 'the heroes of the faith' (Hebrews 11:14).  The story of Abel is a story of grace, faith and obedience. Abel's  sacrifice was a blood sacrifice while Cain's was a fruit sacrifice  (3-4). The blood sacrifice points forward - via the Old Testament  sacrificial system - to the greatest sacrifice of all - 'the blood of  Jesus Christ cleanses us from all sin' (1 John 1:7; Hebrews 9:12). The  blood sacrifice points to salvation by grace - 'without the shedding of  blood there is no forgiveness' (Hebrews 9:22). Abel's sacrifice was an  act of faith: 'By faith Abel offered a better sacrifice than Cain did'  (Hebrews 11:4). The blood reminds us that true faith is always faith in  Christ and never 'faith' in anything we can ever offer to God. Abel was  obedient, bringing 'the firstborn' to God. 'In the course of time Cain  brought some...'. 
22nd January: Genesis 4:6-16. 
In  the story of Cain, we see the development of sin. Jealousy leads to  anger, and anger leads to murder. In this story, we see ourselves in the  'mirror' of God's Word. Here, God emphasizes our exceeding sinfulness -  'The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately corrupt'  (Jeremiah 17:9). Our sinfulness leads us away from 'the presence of the  Lord' to 'the land of wandering (Nod)' (16). This is the work of Satan  in our lives - Genesis 4 is an extension of Genesis 3. Even in the land  of wandering, the hand of God is upon us. This is the meaning of 'the  mark of Cain' - 'so that no one who found him would kill him' (15). Even  in our wanderings, God is waiting in mercy for us to make our way back  to Him by coming in faith to Jesus Christ our Saviour. Even when 'sin'  is a good bit more than 'crouching at the door', it can be 'mastered'  through Christ (6; Hebrews 7:25). 
23rd January: Genesis 4:17-26 
The  story of Cain and Abel is a continuing story. Abel died, yet 'by faith  still speaks, even though he is dead' (Hebrews 11:4). Cain 'went out  from the presence of the Lord'. He became 'a restless wanderer' (14,16).  What a contrast there is between these two brothers! For Abel, there  was glory in the presence of the Lord - 'By faith he was commended as a  righteous man' (Hebrews 11:4), he was 'justified by faith' (Romans 5:1).  Cain was quite different. Far from God, he had no peace. He was haunted  by his sins. What does God's Word say to us about Cain? - 'Do not be  like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and murdered his  brother...because his own actions were evil and his brothers were  righteous' (1 John 3:12). Cain's sinful influence continues. We must be  on our guard. The chapter ends with hope: 'At that time men began to  call on the name of the Lord' ( 26). 
24th January: Genesis 5:1-17 
From  the story of Cain - taking God for granted (the opposite of grace),  approaching God proudly (the opposite of faith), rebelling against God  (the opposite of obedience) - , we come to a list of names and numbers.  In this first part of the chapter, there is nothing of any note.  Perhaps, this is the significant feature of this long list of names.  There is nothing considered to be worthy of special note, except the  length of their lives. What a sad reflection on the value of a life when  all that can be said is this: He lived, and he died! What we must  remember is this: the quantity of our years is less important than the  quality of our living. How long we live is less important than how well  we live. We have been 'created...in the likeness of God' (1), yet so  often we miss out on this spiritual dimension. We have been 'blessed' by  God (2) - 'Count your blessings'. 
25th January: Genesis 5:18-32 
In  this second part of the list, two names get a special mention - Enoch  and Noah (22,24,29). The reference to Enoch is the more memorable of the  two. Enoch's life was characterized by grace, faith and obedience. The  life-story of so many others could be told without reference to God.  Enoch's story was the story of God at work in his life. So many  life-stories end with the words, 'he died'. Enoch's life on earth points  beyond itself (24). Enoch had 'walked with God' (22, 24 ). Building his  life upon the God of grace, Enoch had, by faith, stepped out of this  present world and into 'what we hope for', 'what we do not see' (Hebrews  11:5,1). What a testimony Enoch left behind him! Not much is said about  him, but what power of the Spirit of God there is in these few words!  The reference to 'the Lord' in Noah's life (29) prepares us for what is  to come (chs. 6-9). 
26th January: Matthew 3:1-12 
This  chapter begins with 'John the Baptist' (1). It ends with our Lord Jesus  Christ concerning whom the Voice from heaven says, 'This is my Son,  whom I love; with Him I am well pleased' (17). Once John had served his  purpose, once he has pointed away from himself to the Lord Jesus Christ,  he retreats into the background. This is how it must always be. We  point to One who is 'more powerful' than ourselves (11; Romans 1:16).  With John, we must learn to say, 'Christ must increase, I must decrease'  (John 3:30). The contrast between John and Jesus is highlighted in  verse 11 - ' I baptize with water... He will baptize you with the Holy  Spirit and with fire'. This is still the contrast between the preacher  and the Saviour - We preach the Word. He sends the power. Still He says,  'You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will  be my witnesses' (Acts 1:8). 
27th January: Matthew 3:13-17 
Considering  the contrast between Jesus and John - John is not fit to carry Christ's  sandals (11) - , it is quite remarkable that Jesus submits Himself to  baptism by John. Why does He do this? Jesus gives us the reason in verse  15: 'it is proper for us to do this to fulfil all righteousness'. When  Jesus uses the word 'proper' (or fitting), does He use it to mean  'according to convention'? No - He means that 'it is fitting' into God's  perfect plan of salvation. It is part of His perfect obedience to the  Father. It is part of what is involved in His giving Himself for us as  'the Righteous for the unrighteous to bring us to God' (1 Peter 3:18).  As well as directing us to the Cross, Jesus' baptism directs to  Pentecost - the descent of the Spirit (16; Acts 2:1-4). Christ died for  us. The Spirit lives in us. Jesus 'fits' our need perfectly! 
28th January: Matthew 4:1-11 
God  the Father has declared Jesus to be His Son (3:17). Now, the devil  challenges God's Word: 'If you are the Son of God...' (3). The Spirit  has descended upon Jesus (3:16). Now, the devil uses his power in an  attempt to defeat Jesus. The devil sows seeds of doubt; the 'if you  are...' approach is just the same as his 'Did God really say?' method  used in Genesis 3:1. The devil is 'crafty' (Genesis 3:1). He comes to  Jesus, quoting from the Bible (6; Psalm 91:11-12). His real goal becomes  clear in verse 9 - he wants Jesus to 'bow down and worship' him. In  Jesus' victory over the devil, we see the importance of Scripture - 'It  is written' (4, 7, 10). We learn that true life comes from God (4), true  safety is found in God (7); and true worship is given to God (10). When  the tempter comes, we must stand on God's Word: 'every Word that comes  from...God' ( 4). 
29th January: Matthew 4:12-17 
Having  overcome His enemy, Jesus begins His ministry. Satan will be back -  Luke ends his account of Jesus' temptations with these ominous words,  'When the devil had finished all this tempting, he left until an opportune time'  (4:12). Satan will try again, but - for now - he has failed to stop  Jesus setting out on His ministry, a ministry which brings light into  the darkness. The light is shining brightly - 'the Kingdom of heaven is  near' (17). Jesus' ministry is viewed as a fulfilment of Old Testament  prophecy (15-16; Isaiah 9:1-2). The prophecy had been given: Death will  be overcome, men and women will be delivered from 'the shadow of death'.  Now, in Christ, the prophecy has been fulfilled: by His death, Christ  has destroyed 'him who holds the power of death - that is, the devil'  and He has set 'free' those who live in 'fear of death' (Hebrews  2:14-15). 
30th January: Matthew 4:18-25 
Christ's  victory over the world was won for us (1 John 3:8: 5:4-5). Jesus was  not a loner. He was a team leader: 'From victory to victory His army He  will lead' (Church Hymnary, 481). At the very outset of His  ministry, He set about putting together His ministry team. Peter,  Andrew, James and John were the first four disciples. He called them to  follow Him. His call was both gracious and demanding. It is gracious  because it is the Saviour who calls us: 'Follow Me'. It is demanding because He calls us to follow, to submit to His Lordship: 'Follow Me'. These men were called to a new kind of 'fishing' (19). Jesus'  ministry reached 'great crowds' through His 'teaching ...preaching  ...and healing' (23-25). This chapter sets the scene for Jesus'  ministry. We see the Word of the Lord triumphant over Satan, fulfilled  in Christ, and effective in the lives of the disciples and the crowds. 
31st January: Proverbs 1:1-7 
Scripture  speaks of different kinds of 'wisdom'. In Proverbs, wisdom is closely  associated with godliness. In Ecclesiastes, wisdom - viewed as mere  human intelligence - is described as 'meaningless, a chasing after the  wind' (1:12-18). This contrast is continued in the New Testament, where  Paul describes Christ as our 'Wisdom', contrasting this Wisdom with 'the  wisdom of the world' (1 Corinthians 1:18-25,30). The purpose of  Proverbs is set out in its opening verses. Notice the vital connection  between 'understanding' and 'doing' (2-3). We are to be 'doers' as well  as 'hearers' of God's Word (James 1:22). We are to 'keep what is  written' in God's Word (Revelation 1:3). The great theme of Proverbs is  stated in verse 7: 'The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge'.  Christ is our Wisdom. We will never be wise unless we build our lives  on Him (Matthew 7: 24-27).
1st February : Genesis 6:1-8
1st February : Genesis 6:1-8
The  story of Noah is the story of God's grace - 'Noah found grace' (8).  Noah lived in very difficult times (5-7), yet 'Grace found Noah'. His  testimony could be summed up: 'Amazing grace...I once was lost but now  am found' (Mission Praise, 31). Expanding on the thought of 5:29 -  'this one (Noah) shall bring relief from our work and from the toil of  our hands' - we may allow our thoughts to turn to Christ and say to Him:  'Not the labour of my hands can fulfil Thy law's demands...All for sin  could not atone, Thou must save, and Thou alone. Nothing in my hand I  bring, Simply to Thy Cross I cling' (Church Hymnary, 83). In  these two statements - 'Noah found grace' and 'this one will bring...',  we see both salvation and service. We are saved to serve. Once we  ourselves have been found by grace, we are to seek to bring others to  Christ that they also may be saved by Him and become His servants. 
2nd February: Genesis 6:9-22 
To  view the flood exclusively in terms of judgment is to see only one side  of what God was doing. As well as judging, He was also saving - 'In  this ship a few people - eight in all - were saved by water' (1 Peter  3:20). The ark points forward to Christ 'who came back from death to  life', Christ who 'saves' us (1 Peter 3:21). God was working out His  purpose of salvation. In Noah's day, the remnant of faith was very  small, yet the promise of God's love was given to them - 'I will  establish My covenant with you' (18). Even when wickedness threatens to  overwhelm us, we still have God's promise of love, 'the new covenant in  Christ's blood' (1 Corinthians 11:25). 'The blood of Jesus, God's Son,  cleanses us from all sin' (1 John 1:7). Knowing that Christ loved us and  died for us, we are to be like Noah (22). We are to walk with the Lord  and serve Him. 
3rd February: Genesis 7:1-24 
Here,  we pick up on the words of verse 16 - 'the Lord closed the door behind  them'. What was going on outside of the ark is contrasted with the haven  of salvation inside the ark. What was it that made the ark a place of  salvation? - The Lord. What is it that makes Jesus Christ the Source of  our salvation? - God has given Him the Name that is above every name,  the Name of our salvation (Philippians 2:9-11; Acts 4:12). From the ark,  we learn of (a) the one way of salvation - The ark had only one door.  Jesus is 'the Door' which leads to salvation (John 10:9); (b) the  eternal security of salvation - All were safe inside the ark. In Christ  there is eternal security (John 10:28); (c) the absolute necessity of  salvation - Outside of the ark, there was certain death. Refusal to come  to Christ for salvation leads to judgment: 'How shall we escape...?'  (Hebrews 2:3). 
4th February: Genesis 8:1-22 
Following  the flood, we have this simple yet striking declaration: 'the ground  was dry' (13). Safe from judgment! This is the message which comes to us  from the Cross: 'Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the  world' (John 1:29). The judgment has fallen upon Christ. We are no  longer swept away in the judgment. We can stand on solid ground: 'On  Christ the solid Rock I stand' (Church Hymnary, 411). He is our  Support in 'the whelming flood'. God said to Noah, 'Come out of the  ship' (15). We are in Christ. He is the Source of our salvation. God has  brought us into Christ (1 Corinthians 1:30). He does not bring us into  Christ solely for our own benefit. We are sent out to be fruitful (17:  John 15: 16). We are to 'abide in Christ'. This is the way of  fruitfulness (John 15: 4-5). We are not sent out alone. Strengthened in  'the ship' (in Christ), we step out with Christ and for Him. 
5th February: Genesis 9:1-19 
'When  you see a rainbow, remember God is love'. The rainbow reminds us of the  gracious promise of God (13-15). If the love of God is revealed in the  rainbow, it is more fully revealed in the Cross: 'We sing the praise of  Him who died, of Him who died upon the Cross...upon the Cross we see in  shining, letters 'God is love', He bears our sins upon the tree. He  brings us mercy from above'. When we read the Old Testament stories, we  must learn to see their place within the fuller Story, the Story of  God's salvation: 'I will sing the wondrous Story of the Christ who died  for me'. This is the greatest Story of all - 'the Story of Jesus and His  glory, of Jesus and His love,...the Story of wonderful redemption,  God's remedy for sin'. 'This is our Story. This is our Song, praising  our Saviour all the day long'. This is 'the Story to tell to the  nations' (Church Hymnary, 258,381,132; Mission Praise, 59,744). 
6th February: Genesis 9:20-29 
What  a sad episode this is! It teaches us that yesterday's victories can  become today's defeats, if we do not keep close to God. We read, in  Hebrews 11:7 of Noah the man of faith, but here we have a very different  picture. The lesson is clear - 'The arm of flesh will fail you; Ye dare  not trust your own'. We must not look to our own strength to keep us in  the way of faith and obedience. It cannot be done. We fail. 'God can do  anything but fail'. We must affirm our faith in God - 'All my hope on  God is founded'. In man, there is no sure foundation - only 'change and  chance'. There is nothing that will last - 'only pride of man and  earthly glory' (Church Hymnary, 481,405). Can we be guided  through change and chance? Yes, but we must learn from Noah's fall -  Past grace is no guarantee of present growth - , and we must keep our  eyes on Jesus, 'the Author and Finisher of our faith' (Hebrews 12: 2). 
7th February: Matthew 5:1-2 
Here,  we have the introduction to 'the Sermon on the Mount' (chs 5-7).  Reference is made to both 'the disciples' and 'the crowds'. The  disciples are taught with a view to becoming teachers of the crowds.  Peter learned from Christ and later he taught the crowds (Acts 2:14-42).  The Sermon on the Mount was heard by the crowds as well as the  disciples. Jesus spoke to the crowds. His ministry to the disciples had a  dual purpose. It was for their own spiritual strengthening. It was  training for the time when they would be entrusted with the Lord's  commission: 'Go therefore and make disciples of all nations...teaching  them to observe all that I have commanded you' (Matthew 28: 19-20). Do  you read God's Word solely for your own benefit? Or, do we have an eye  for ways in which we can learn to share His Word with others? 
8th February: Matthew 5:3-12 
'The  Beatitudes' show us God's way of blessing. We might also describe them  as the Be Attitudes, since they show us what we are to be. Jesus teaches  us that the way to happiness is the way of holiness. The only  alternative to the way of holiness is the way of hypocrisy. There can be  no true happiness when we are walking in the way of hypocrisy. Holiness  is to take shape in our lives - the shape of Jesus Christ living in us.  This is the truly happy life: the Christ centered life. We are not to  live according to present appearances. We are to live in the light of  the future Reality of God's heavenly Kingdom. Some of Jesus' later  statements can be viewed as an exploration of the meaning of the  Beatitudes. The general principles (3-10) are to be applied personally:  'Blessed are you...' (11-12). We are not only to read the Beatitudes. We  are to live them. 
9th February: Matthew 5:13-16 
Holiness  is to be seen. Happiness is to be shared. We are not to be secret  disciples. It will not be easy to live the life of Christ's disciples.  In a world of much corruption, we are to be 'the salt of the earth'  (13). In a world of much darkness we are to be 'the light of the world'  (14). If we are to bring the refreshing light of Christ into our world,  we ourselves must receive spiritual refreshment as we let the light of  God's Word shine on our lives. Reading God's Word can never be a purely  personal thing. Being 'the salt of the earth' and 'the light of the  world' - this is what Jesus says we are - , we read Scripture  with a view to learning how we are to live in the world. Don't lose your  saltiness. Be salty enough to create a thirst for God in other people.  Don't let your light grow dim. Let it shine brightly. Remember - all the  glory belongs to God (16; Psalm 115:1). 
10th February: Matthew 5:17-20 
In  verse 20, Jesus refers to 'the scribes and Pharisees'. Jesus warned  against the shallow superficiality of these men who were more concerned  with outward appearances than inner reality. This conflict with the  Jewish religious leaders lies close to the surface in the Sermon on the  Mount. When Jesus says, 'This is their way. This is My way', He is not  calling in question the authority of the Old Testament Scriptures:  'Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have  come not to abolish them but to fulfil them' (17). He is in conflict  with 'the hypocrites' (6:2 5,16). He is warning against the 'false  prophets, who come to you in sheep's clothing but inwardly are ravenous  wolves' (7:15). What a difference there was between Jesus' teaching and  those who 'preach, but do not practise' (23:3) - He spoke with  'authority', they did not (7:29). May we be like Jesus! 
11th February: Matthew 5:21-37 
The  teaching of Jesus here may be summed up thus: The heart of the matter  is the matter of the heart. Jesus' teaching was much more penetrating  than the pronouncements made by the scribes and Pharisees. Not content  to scratch the surface, Jesus asked the deeper question, 'What's going  on in your heart?'. Jesus' teaching has real spiritual depth. He takes  seriously the biblical teaching that 'the heart is deceitful above all  things, and desperately corrupt' (Jeremiah 17:9). He knows that we need a  'new heart' (Ezekiel 36:26). The Pharisees were bogged down in  intricate details - Do this. Do that. Do the other. All the emphasis was  on what we do. Christ was much more direct - Get the heart right. Ask  God for a heart of love (21-26), purity (27-32), and truthfulness  (33-37). Do not say, 'Look what I've done' (7:22). Let Christ live in  your heart; let Him change you. 
12th February: Matthew 5:38-48 
The  Pharisees lived by law. Jesus lived by love. The law of God - 'holy and  just and good' (Romans 7:12) - had been distorted by the religious  hypocrites. They were saying, 'love your neighbour and hate your  enemy' (43). 'Love your neighbour' is found in Leviticus 19:18. 'Hate  your enemy' is not found in the Old Testament. For the Jews,  'neighbour' meant their own kind. They wrongly concluded that Gentiles  were to be hated. Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan makes it clear  that we are to love our enemies as well as our friends (Luke 10:25-37).  Jesus' disagreement is not with the law of God. It is with man's misuse  of it. Jesus' teaching is simple - Love is not to be limited. It is  demanding - love is all-embracing. We dare not bring love within our  reach. We always fall short. We can only come to Christ. Confessing our  lack of love and trusting in His perfect love, we learn to love. 
13th February: Psalm 2:1-12 
In  this Psalm we read of a conflict. On the one side there is 'the Lord  and His Anointed' (2). On the other there are those who 'conspire  and...plot' (1). The conspiracies and plots of men will come to nothing.  The saving purpose of God will be fulfilled. This purpose will be  accomplished in Christ, the One to whom God says, 'You are my Son' (7),  the One to whom God says, 'I will make the nations your inheritance, the  ends of the earth your possession' (8). God calls us to worship Christ -  'Kiss the Son' (12). This call to worship Christ is accompanied by a  warning against judgment and a promise of salvation. As sinners, we are  under God's judgment. Trusting in Christ, we are saved (12; John 3:36).  We are to take delight in Christ. This is the thought conveyed by the  phrase, 'Kiss the Son'. We delight in God's Son, and we delight in God's  Word which leads us to Him. 
14th February: Genesis 10:1-32 
What  a lot of names! Why is all this included in God's Word? It may describe  the historical context of God's unfolding purpose of providing  salvation for sinners, but what does it say to us? The inclusion of so  many obscure names emphasizes that everyone - however obscure - is  important. 'God so loved the world' (John 3:16) - not only the 'important' people but all people. Names are important to God. Jesus, the Good Shepherd, calls His  sheep 'by name' (John 10:3). Among the many names there is an  interesting reference to 'Nimrod, the first mighty warrior on the  earth...a mighty hunter whom the Lord blessed' (8-9). First among 'the  cities of his kingdom' was 'Babylon' (10). Alarm bells ring! - Babylon's  rebellion! The privilege of God's blessing brings the responsibility of  maintaining His blessing. We must be 'mighty warriors' for God (2  Corinthians 10:4; Ephesians 6:10-20). 
15th February: Genesis 11:1-9 
Human  pride sets itself up against the authority of God. This is the  oft-repeated story of the 'Tower of Babel'. The end of godless men is  sure - 'Tower and temple, fall to dust' (Church Hymnary, 405). Sin can be analyzed psychologically in terms of the human attitude of proud independence ('let us make a name for ourselves', v.5), sociologically in terms of sin's pervasive influence on a whole society (this was the sin of a whole society), and theologically in terms of the divine judgment which human sin brings upon itself  (5-9). What a contrast there is between the Tower of Babel and the great  declaration of Proverbs 18:10 - 'The Name of the Lord is a strong  tower'. In Babel there is scattering (9). In the Lord, there is safety -  'A righteous man runs to it and is safe'. Do not imagine yourself to be  strong (Proverbs 18:11). True strength is in Christ alone (1  Corinthians 1:27). 
16th February: Genesis 11:10-32 
Another list of names! Again, there is something here for us - God is moving on.  These many names summarize the times between Noah and Abraham. We must  look beyond this list of names. We must see them in connection with His  Story. History can be tedious, until we see it as His Story. From the  human standpoint, things seem to have come to a dead end: 'Now Sarai was  barren; she had no child' (30). There are, however, no dead ends when  God is at work. From verse 30, we move on to 12:1-3. We read on though  the story of Abraham. We learn of the faith of Sarah and the  faithfulness of God (Hebrews 11:11-12). We follow the Story on to  Christ, who is the fulfilment of the promise given to Abraham (Genesis  12:1-3; Galatians 3:16). This is the Story of 'the God of Abraham', the  'God of love'. Through Christ our Saviour, we will 'sing the wonders of  His grace for ever more' (Church Hymnary, 358). 
17th February: Matthew 6:1-18 
Jesus  says that we are not to be like 'the hypocrites' (2,5,16). The word  'hypocrite' means 'play actor'. It refers to 'putting on a performance'.  This performance may be extremely religious, but God is not in it. The  hypocrites live according to 'the letter' of the law, but they know  nothing of the power of 'the Spirit' (2 Corinthians 3:6). The  hypocrites' religious performance gets along very well without God. His  presence is not sought, welcomed or treasured. The hypocrites draw  attention to themselves. They do not direct attention away from  themselves to God. There is a better way than the way of hypocrisy. It  is the way of holiness. Our lives are to be centred on Christ - 'it is  no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me' (Galatians 2:20). We  must not forget: apart from Him we can do nothing. We are to abide in  Him (John 15:5) - in true holiness. 
18th February: Matthew 6:19-34 
On  the one side of Christ's disciples, there are the hypocrites. On the  other side, there are 'the Gentiles' (32). The hypocrites represent  religion without reality. The Gentiles represent the world, living for  material things only, refusing to take spiritual realities seriously. We  are to be different from both the hypocrites and the Gentiles. Our top  priority is pleasing God, not impressing men. We are to live for God's  eternal Kingdom rather than living for a world which is passing away.  Living for Christ is very different from worldly living. Our life is to  be governed by heavenly, and not earthly, priorities (19-21). We are to  walk in the light, refusing to be overcome by the darkness (22-23). We  are to trust the Lord, refusing to let unbelieving anxiety rule our  lives ( 25-34). 
19th February: Matthew 7:1-14 
Jesus'  teaching regarding Christian living can be related to His teaching in  'the Lord's Prayer' (6:9-13). We are not to pray one thing and do  another. We are to live the Lord's Prayer. We receive forgiveness from  God. We are to show His forgiveness to others. We receive good things  from God. We are to be generous in our giving to others. Before you can  live the Christian Life, you must receive the Christian Life - Christ  living in your heart (Revelation 3.20). Before you can walk in 'the  way', you must enter by 'the gate' (13-14). Jesus speaks of two gates,  two ways and two destinations. He tells us that some will be saved and  many will be lost. What we must remember is this - Christ is 'the Door'  (John 10:7), 'the Way' (John 14:6) and 'our Hope of glory' (Colossians  1:27). The gate may be narrow, the way hard, but never forget this -  Christ is 'the Gate' and 'the Way' that leads to life. 
20th February: Matthew 7:15-29 
Whenever  we are seeking to follow Christ, there will be dangers - false prophets  (15-20), empty profession (21-23). Clearly, our faith must be grounded  in the Son of God and the Word of God. This is the point of Jesus'  parable of the two builders and the two houses (24-27). We must build  upon Christ. We must build on the Word of God. Jesus' 'sermon' ends in  verse 27, and is followed - in verses 28-29 - by a statement of its  effect upon His hearers. Down through the centuries, Jesus' teaching  continues to make this impression on people. His words come to us with  authority, addressing us with remarkable relevance. We imagine that our  time is very different from Jesus' time, yet Jesus' words make it very  clear - things are not so different after all. Still, we hear Him  speaking as One who has authority. His Word is unchanged, unchanging and  unchangeable. 
21st February: Proverbs 1:8-19 
If  we are to be saved, we must follow the Wisdom of the Proverbs: 'Listen,  my son, to your father's instruction' (8). We must follow the 'Word of  the Father, now in flesh appearing', the living Word, our Lord Jesus  Christ (Church Hymnary, 191). Satan is seeking to destroy us -  'let's swallow them alive, like the grave' (12). To 'go along with'  those who do not honour the Lord Jesus Christ is to 'rush into sin'  (15-16). To live by faith in Christ is to be 'kept by the power of God'  for full salvation (1 Peter 1:5). There are choices to be made. You  remain a fool if you choose not to ask God for wisdom (James 1:5-8). The  fool is 'a double-minded man', trying to live for the Lord and for the  world at the same time. Will you be wise or foolish? - The choice is  yours. Remember this has more to do with the moral choices you make than  with how 'well educated' you may be. 
22nd February: Genesis 12:1-20 
This  is a divine Story, carried forward by God's grace and power. God's very  great promises (1-3) find their ultimate fulfilment in the coming of  God's eternal Kingdom (Revelation 21:10). We have not reached our  heavenly destination. We are still caught in the tension between  obedience (4) and disobedience (11-13). We are conscious of our human  failure, yet we rejoice in the divine faithfulness. We read of Abraham's  sin (10-20), yet we look beyond this to God's salvation. This is not  simply the story of Abraham. It is the Story of Abraham's God.  This becomes clear in the change of name. Abram ('exalted father') draws  attention to the man. Abraham ('Father of Many') points to God's  purpose (17:5). Like Abraham , we are to worship God (7-8). We are to  say, 'He is exalted'. We are to say, 'Christ must increase, and I must decrease' (John 3:30). 
23rd February: Genesis 13:1-18 
Life  is full of choices. Lot made a selfish choice (10-12). He allied  himself with 'the men of Sodom (who) were wicked and were sinning  greatly against the Lord' (13). Abraham made a godly choice, and he was  blessed by the Lord (14-17). The lesson of Abraham's choice is the  lesson of Matthew 6:33 - Seek God's glory and find His blessing. We read  later of Lot's restoration (19:29). This is 'amazing grace'! How much  better it would have been if Lot had chosen the Lord's way in the first  place! The choices we make reveal the people that we are. The worldly  man, Lot, thought only of himself. The spiritual man, Abraham, concerned  himself with doing the Lord's will. The worldly man takes for himself  (11). The spiritual man receives from the Lord (15). Our sin comes from  ourselves. Our salvation comes from the Lord. Confess your sin. Receive  God's forgiveness. 
24th February: Genesis 14:1-24 
Following  an account of military conflict, we come to a passage that is full of  Christ (18-20). In Melchizedek, we see Jesus. In Hebrews 7:3, we learn  that Melchizedek resembles the Son of God. We read on, in verse 4, 'See  how great he is', and, in our hearts we say, 'How great is our Lord  Jesus Christ'. Melchizedek is 'the King of Salem (peace)' (18), pointing  to Christ through whom we have 'peace with God' (Romans 5:1).  Melchizedek brings 'bread and wine' (18), pointing to Christ whose body  was broken for us and whose blood was shed for us (1 Corinthians  11:23-26). Melchizedek spoke of the divine deliverance from enemies  (20), pointing to Christ's victory over Satan (Colossians 2:15). In this  episode we see the origins of tithing. It is not a legalistic practice.  God had been good to Abraham. In grateful worship, Abraham responded,  giving the tenth to Him (20). 
25th February: Matthew 8.1-22 
In  verses 1-17, we read of three people who received the Lord's blessing -  the leper was cleansed (1-4), the centurion's servant was healed  (5-13), Peter's mother-in-law was healed (14-17). Reading verses 18-22  together with Luke 9:57-62, we learn of three people who did not receive  the Lord's blessing (Matthew mentions two, while Luke adds a third).  Christ calls us to decision. Some say 'Yes' to Him and they are blessed.  Some say 'No', and they miss out on the blessing. Christ touches our  lives, and we are made clean (3; 1 John 1.7) - 'The vilest offender who  truly believes, that moment from Jesus a pardon receives' (13; Church Hymnary,  374). Through the entrance of His Word, we receive a new Spirit (16;  Ezekiel 36:25-27). Cleansed and healed, we are to live as Christ's  disciples. There is to be no half-heartedness: 'I will follow you, Lord,  but...' (Luke 9:61). Yes, Lord! 
26th February:. Matthew 8:23-9:17 
In  8:23-9:8, we read of three great miracles, in which Christ demonstrates  His power over nature (23), demons (28-34) and sickness (1-8).  Following such mighty works of power, the next verse seems so ordinary -  Jesus said, 'Follow me'. Matthew 'rose and followed Him' (9). Matthew's  conversion may seem so unspectacular, but it is no less a mighty work  of God than the great miracles which preceded it. Where does the desire  to follow Christ come from? Does it come from our own sinful hearts? No!  It comes from the Word of Christ, spoken in power and love - 'He drew  me and I followed on, charmed to confess the Voice Divine' (Mission Praise,  499). In the human heart there is resistance - we say, 'I am  "righteous". "I have no need" of a Saviour' (12-13). This resistance is  broken down by Christ when 'new wine is put into fresh wineskins' (17). 
27th February: Matthew 9.18-38 
In  Jesus' miracles, we see Him triumph over sin, death and hell. As well  as healing, there is forgiveness (9:5-6), the raising of the dead  (18,24-25) and the casting out of demons (33). The Pharisees (Jewish  religious leaders) did not like what was happening, and they came up  with their own explanation - 'He casts out demons by the prince of  demons' (34). Jesus gives us another, better, explanation: 'The Spirit  of the Lord is upon me...' (Luke 4:18-19). Jesus was sent to preach the  Gospel. We are to bring the Gospel to other people. Jesus was  'teaching...preaching...and healing' (35). What opportunities there are  to bring the healing power of Christ into many hearts and homes! These  opportunities will be missed if 'the labourers' remain 'few' (37). Many  are 'harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd' (v.36). We  must not fail them! 
28th February: Psalm 3:1-6 
This  Psalm begins with the human situation - 'O Lord, how many are my foes!  How many rise up against me! Many are saying of me, "God will not  deliver him"'' (1-2). It ends with the divine provision - 'From the Lord  comes deliverance' (8). How does the Psalmist rise above his deeply  distressing circumstances? He takes his problem to the Lord. The Psalm's  opening words, 'O Lord', indicate the way toward its triumphant  conclusion. Why is the Psalmist not overwhelmed by depression? - He is  looking to the Lord. This is not a case of 'positive thinking' on the  part of David. This is deliverance from the Lord. There is no simple  'psychological' explanation for David's change of mood. He is delivered  by the Lord. He is raised from his depressive mood by the Lord, 'my  Glorious One, who lifts up my head' ( 3). What He's done for others, He  can do for you!
1st March: Genesis 15:1-21 
God  is greater than our circumstances. God had given great promises to  Abraham, yet there appeared no sign that His promises were being  fulfilled. The circumstances seemed bleak, and Abraham felt despondent.  Abraham was full of questions. In verse 2, he asks, 'What can you give  me...?'. This is the question of salvation. What does God give? He gives  salvation. In verse 8, he asks, 'How can I know...?'. This is the  question of assurance. We ask for assurance. God gives it - the  assurance of salvation, the assurance that salvation has been given and  received. Where are we to look for answers to these questions? Are we to  look to our circumstances? Are we to look to our feelings? No. We look  to the 'Almighty God' (2,8). Trusting in Christ, the 'Passover  Lamb...sacrificed for us', we receive a sure salvation (6:1; 1  Corinthians 5:7; John 20:31; 1 John 5:13). 
2nd March: Genesis 16: 1-16 
From  salvation and the assurance of salvation, we turn to Satan and the  activity of Satan. Sarai came with temptation (1). Abraham yielded to  temptation (2). Temptation becomes sin when we yield to it. In Abraham,  we see the conflict between 'the old man' that he was and 'the new man'  God was calling him to become (17:5; Galatians 5:17). He chose the way  of unbelief. Listening to the voice of Satan, speaking through Sarai, he  walked straight into immorality. Unbelief and immorality belong  together (Romans 1:18). We must guard our hearts with respect to both  what we believe and how we behave. We must not imagine that Satan will  win the victory over the Lord and His purpose of salvation. Satan will  try to overcome God's gracious purpose, but he will not succeed  (Revelation 20:10). 'Hallelujah!... the Lord our God the Almighty  reigns' (Revelation 19:6). 
3rd March: Genesis 17:1-27 
Amazing  grace - this is the marvellous theme of this chapter. Abram became  Abraham (5). Sarai became Sarah (15-16). What they were belonged to  their sinful past. What they became was the work of God's grace. What a  contrast there is between human sin and divine grace. We look at  ourselves. We see sin, and we lose hope. We look at the God of grace,  and we say, 'Sin shall not have dominion. Grace is victorious' (Romans  6:14). Abram and Sarai appeared to be hopeless cases. They had failed  the Lord, but He did not fail them. He made them new people. They became  the father and mother of nations. To those who do not deserve His love,  God still renews His 'covenant', His promise of love (2). He still  says, 'I have loved you with an everlasting love' (Jeremiah 31:3). In  the Cross of Christ, we have the greatest 'sign of the covenant' (11;  Romans 5:8). 
4th March: Genesis 18:1-15 
Is  anything too hard for the Lord? (14). We need to hear these words as  God's call to greater faith. Sarah, like Abraham, had heard God's  promises, yet 'she laughed to herself' (12). We can hear God's Word, and  still remain, in our hearts, men and women of unbelief. The Word of God  does not benefit us when we do not receive it with faith (Hebrews 4:2).  God knows what is in our hearts, just as He knew what was in Sarah's  heart (13-15). He knows the human heart, 'deceitful above all things'  (Jeremiah 17:9), yet He continues to love us. He does not give up on us.  He perseveres with us. He could have given up on Sarah as a hopeless  waste of His time, but He did not. 'The evil heart of unbelief' is  always with us, but God is constantly at work to create in us 'a clean  heart' ( Hebrews 3:12: Psalm 51:10). 'Soften my heart, Lord' (Mission Praise, 606). 
5th March: Genesis 18:16-33 
In  the face of the threatened judgment of God upon Sodom and Gomorrah, we  find Abraham engaging in mighty intercessory prayer. He is not concerned  only about himself and his own salvation. He is prayerfully committed  to seeking the salvation of others. This is a mark of spiritual maturity  - a deep concern for the salvation of sinners, leading to earnest  intercessory prayer for them. Abraham drew near to God (23; James 4:8).  He pleaded with the God of grace to have mercy on the city (23-25; 2  Peter 3:9; 1 Timothy 2:3-4, 1:15; John 3:17). With a deep love for the  people, Abraham prays with boldness and persistence (27,32; Hebrews  4:16). A great many people refused to honour God, yet His purpose was  not hindered. The remnant seemed impossibly small. It was the beginning  of blessing for all nations. 'To God be the glory, Great things He has  done' (Church Hymnary, 374). 
6th March: Matthew 10:1-20 
Jesus  gave authority to His disciples (1). He gives authority to us. It is  the authority of the Word and the Spirit - 'you will be given what to  say' by 'the Spirit of your Father speaking through you' (20). Christ's  disciples were being trained for a great work to be done in the Name and  the Power of the Lord (28: 18-20). If we are to communicate the Word in  the power of the Spirit, we need to see our life as life in the Spirit  and life under the Word. Scripture calls us to 'be filled with the  Spirit' (Ephesians 5:18) and to 'let the Word of Christ dwell in us  richly' (Colossians 3:16). To be filled with the Spirit is to let the  Word of Christ dwell in us richly. To let the Word of Christ dwell in us  richly is to be filled with the Spirit. We are to live in the power of  the Spirit. We are to live in accordance with the Scriptures. 
7th March: Matthew 10:21-42 
Jesus  tells us that 'a student is not above his teacher nor a servant above  his master' (24). Our Teacher is the Lord Jesus Christ. He is our  Master. Jesus emphasizes that 'it is enough for the student to be like  his teacher and the servant like his master' (25). This is the goal of  the Christian life - we are to be like Jesus. This will not be an easy  life. There will be persecution (22; 2 Timothy 3:12). In this situation -  going the way of the Cross with Jesus (38) - we need to hear and heed  the Word of the Lord: Do not fear man. Fear God (28). The fear of men is  to be avoided. The fear of God is to be treasured greatly. There will  be conflict with those who do not honour God (34-37). We must remember:  pleasing God is more important than pleasing people. Our prayer is that  our hearers will receive Christ as well as ourselves (40). 
8th March: Matthew 11:1-19 
Much  is said about John the Baptist here, yet the whole purpose is to draw  attention to Jesus the Saviour. Jesus is superior to John. He is the One  to whom John pointed. There are two responses to Jesus. We can take  offence at Him: 'Blessed is he who takes no offence at Me' (6). We can  hear what He says, receiving Him with faith: 'He who has ears to hear,  let him hear' (15). In His time, Jesus asked the question, 'To whom  shall I compare this generation?', giving the answer, 'We played the  flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not  mourn' (16-17). The promise of the Gospel is preached, yet many will not  rejoice. The warning of the Gospel is preached, yet many will not  repent. This is the story of our generation. May God help us to lead  people of this generation to Christ, the 'Friend of sinners' (19). 
9th March: Matthew 11:20-30 
In  John 16:8-11, Jesus speaks of the work of the Holy Spirit, convicting  the world of sin, righteousness and judgment. Before there can be  conversion, there needs to be conviction of sin. None of us can come to  the Saviour of sinners without first seeing ourselves as sinners who  need the Saviour. God uses the warning of judgment to send us to the  Saviour - there 'will be...judgment', so make sure that you 'come' to  Christ for salvation (24,28; Luke 3:7-8; Hebrews 2:3; 3:7-15). Before  there can be growth in grace, there needs to be conversion. Before we  can live a righteous life, learning from Christ (29; 1 Peter 1:15-16),  we must come to Christ for rest, being declared righteous by Him (28;  Romans 4:5-8). In Christ, we have salvation, set free from judgment -  'no condemnation' - and set free for righteousness - 'living according  to the Spirit' (Romans 8:1). 
10th March: Proverbs 1:20-33 
This  section begins with the words, 'Wisdom calls aloud in the street, she  raises her voice in the public squares' (20) and ends with the words,  'whoever listens to Me will live in safety and be at ease, without fear  of harm' (33). The Gospel is not to be kept to ourselves. Christ is to  be proclaimed. Why is it so important that we tell others about our  Saviour, Jesus Christ? - It is because He offers salvation to all who  come to Him: 'Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved'  (Romans 10:13). Later on, in Proverbs, we read, 'he who wins souls is  wise' (11:30). Those who are wise will pray for a greater fulfilment of  the Lord's promise: 'you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes  on you; and you will be my witnesses...' (Acts 1:8). Filled with the  Holy Spirit, we will speak the Word of God boldly (Acts 4:31). 
11th March: Genesis 19:1-29 
In  Genesis 3, we read of humanity's fall into sin. Here, we see the  awfulness of human sin and the awesomeness of divine judgment. We must  take God with the utmost seriousness. If we refuse to take Him  seriously, He will continue to take us seriously - in His judgment! Sin  leads to judgment - that's the lesson of Sodom and Gomorrah. There is  sadness in the story of Lot. A compromised believer for whom the world  had no respect, he chose Sodom. This choice brought him nothing but sin  and shame - 'and now he wants to play the judge!' (9). The amazing thing  is that God did not give up on this 'backslider' - 'the Lord was  merciful to them...He brought Lot out of the catastrophe' (16,29). What a  great thing it is to have God's salvation: 'everything we need for life  and godliness' to 'escape the corruption in the world' (2 Peter 1:3-5).  
12th March: Genesis 19:30-20:18 
These  are stories of deception and deceit. Lot is deceived by his daughters  (30-38). Abraham deceives Abimelech (1-18). Even with the divine  provision for godliness, we need to be constantly on our guard. Even  those to whom we had looked for help can turn out to be a hindrance. Lot  was drawn into incest. This had drastic effects - 'the father of the  Moabites, the father of the Ammonites' (37-38)! Devotion to the Lord  needs to be renewed day-by-day. Otherwise, we will be vulnerable to the  attacks of the enemy and overcome by him. Abraham concealed the whole  truth by telling a half-truth (12). Abraham was regarded as 'a prophet'  (7). He ought to have lived the life of a prophet, a true life. We are  to be true - the people of God. 
13th March: Genesis 21:1-21 
We  have here the contrast between Isaac, the child of promise, and  Ishmael, the fruit of unbelief. Ishmael was born as a result of  impatience, the failure to wait upon the Lord. In the birth of Isaac,  the initiative belonged with God, and the glory belonged to Him. In  Christ, we are the children of promise - 'children born not of natural  descent, nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God'  (John 1:13). God did not forget Ishmael. There were blessings for him  (17-21). The difference between Ishmael and Isaac is the difference  between common grace and saving grace. Many people know much of the  grace of God in 'the common things of life' (Church Hymnary,  457). There are so many blessings for them to count. Still they fail to  appreciate God's greatest gift - His Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ.  Thank God for this and that and...Jesus! 
14th March: Genesis 21:22-22:14 
Here,  we see Abraham in his relationship with the world (22-34) and his  relationship with the Lord (1-14). Abraham deals honestly and wisely  with the pagan king, Abimelech, who acknowledges Abraham's closeness to  God - 'God is with you in all that you do' (22). We are to be honest and  wise in our relationship with the world (Romans 12:17; Colossians 4:5;  Ephesians 5:15; 1 Peter 2:12). Our relationship with the world is to be  grounded in our relationship with God. In the testing of Abraham, we  catch a glimpse of 'the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world'  (John 1:29). Christ is the Lamb whom God will provide (8). In  verse 14, we read, 'On the mount of the Lord it shall be provided'. On  Calvary's hill, Christ died to bring us to God, so that we might learn  to live for Him in this world (1 Peter 3:18; 2:24). 
15th March: Genesis 22:15-23:20 
After  the renewal of God's promise (15-18), Abraham went to Beersheba (19).  He returned to the place where he had 'called...on the Name of the Lord,  the Everlasting God' (33). This is a good 'place' to be, the 'place' of  calling on the Name of the Lord, the Everlasting God. As we read of the  death and burial of Sarah, we must remember this: the Lord is the  Everlasting God. The death of Sarah took place in God's time. Her death  signified that her work had been done. She had mothered the child of  promise. Beyond the death of Sarah, there was the continuing purpose of  God. The cave at Machpelah (23:19-20) became the burial place for Sarah,  Abraham, Isaac, Rebekah, Jacob and Leah. We see the continuity of  history, and we thank God for His continuing faithfulness down through  the generations. 
16th March: Matthew 12:1-21 
Much  of Jesus' ministry was carried out under the watchful eye of the  Pharisees. The controversy with the Pharisees was intensifying (2, 14).  The Pharisees were out to get Jesus. For all their religion, they had no  time for Jesus. Still, there are the critics, those who try to  undermine our faith in Christ, those who attempt to draw us away from  serving Christ. We must remain resolute in our faith, believing what God  says concerning His Son: 'Here is my Servant whom I have chosen, the  One I love, in whom I delight' (18; 3:17; 17:5). As we read of Jesus,  the chosen Servant of God, loved by the Father and bringing delight to  the Father's heart, we should give thanks for all that God has done for  us in Christ (Ephesians 1: 4-6), and we should commit ourselves afresh  to the service of Christ (1 Corinthians 15:58). 
17th March: Matthew 12:22-37 
Opposition  from the Pharisees was growing all the time (24). Jesus had to rebuke  them in very strong words (30, 32,34,36-37). This was not exactly a 'How  to win friends and influence people' approach! Nevertheless, this was a  time for strong words. Jesus' ministry illustrates the principle: 'a  time to tear down and a time to build' (Ecclesiastes 3:3). There was a  time for 'whoever is not against us is for us' (Mark 9:40). This was the  time for 'he who is not with me is against me' (30). There was a time  for speaking of the Spirit as 'the Comforter' (John 14:16,26). This was  the time for the warning about the 'blasphemy against the Spirit' (31).  The opposition was severe, but Jesus was victorious - He 'drove out  demons by the Spirit of God', in Him 'the Kingdom of God had come' (28).  In Him, we are victorious (Romans 8:37; Revelation 12:11). 
18th March: Matthew 12:38-50 
Jesus  did not 'mince His words' with the Pharisees. He described them as 'a  wicked and adulterous generation' (39,45). They were men who, by their  stubborn refusal to listen to Jesus, had placed themselves under the  judgment of God. The Pharisees may have had no time for Jesus, but there  were those who were eager to learn from Him. Out of 'the crowd' (46),  Jesus was calling to Himself those who were learning what it really  means to be related to Him (50). Jesus directed attention away  from His human connections to His divine authority. Sometimes, people  make too much of the wrong things - 'Blessed is the womb that bore  you...' (Luke 11:27). They need to be reminded of the things that really  matter: 'Blessed rather are those who hear the Word of God and keep it'  (Luke 11:28). As God's children we are to do His will (50; John 14:21).  
19th March: Matthew 13:1-23 
Jesus  spoke in parables. He spoke of everyday things, teaching lessons  concerning the Kingdom of God. He was a story-teller, and yet He was  more than that. His stories had a message, a life-changing message, a  message designed to lead His hearers into new life, the life of God's  Kingdom. The parable of the sower may be described more fully as the  parable of 'the sower, the seed and the soil'. Some respond to God's  Word in a shallow way. In others, there is greater depth of response.  Some 'enjoy' the preaching without really responding, in faith, to  Christ. Jesus says, 'He who has ears , let him hear' (10). Receive God's  Word in obedient faith, and your knowledge of God will increase (12).  This is the way of childlike faith and spiritual growth. Beware of proud  unbelief and spiritual decline (12; 11:25)! 
20th March: Matthew 13:24 -43 
Jesus'  parables are so rich in spiritual content. They speak with an  indirectness which is very direct! They may be parabolic in form, but  they do go right to the heart of the matter in a way that is very  challenging. The parable of the 'wheat and the weeds' (24-30, with  explanation given in 36-43) contrasts a real believing response to  Christ with an empty profession of faith in Him. There is also something  else - leave judgment to God. He knows those who are His and those who  are not. The parable of the mustard seed (31-32) is a word of  encouragement - Do not give up hope that the seed of God's Word is  growing, slowly and surely, in the hearts of those who do not appear to  be bearing much fruit. The parable of the yeast is also encouraging -  What a difference even a few believers can make to a whole community! 
21st March: Matthew 13: 44-58 
Be  patient. Do not doubt the power of God's Word. Once God's Word has  begun to exert its influence among the people, great things will happen.  The beginnings may seem small. Remember: nothing is insignificant when  God is in it! Some may be on the verge of the kind of joyful discovery  of Christ, described in 44-46! The parable of the net (47-50) is similar  to the parable of the wheat and the tares (24-30). The separation of  'the good' and 'the bad' comes 'at the end of the age' (48-49). The  Gospel is 'old' and 'new' (52) - we've known its teaching for years, yet  there are always some 'new treasures' for us to discover. It's sadly  possible to hear the Word of God without believing it and enjoying its  blessing. Don't let Christ be 'a prophet without honour' (57). Honour  Him in your heart and life. 
22nd March: Psalm 4:1-8 
There  is a great message of the Gospel here. By ourselves, we are sinners,  turning God's glory to shame, loving delusions and seeking false gods  (2). By grace, God has done something about this - 'the Lord has set  apart the godly for Himself' (3). When we pray, 'Answer me' (1), we have  this confidence: 'the Lord will hear when I call to Him' (3). The Lord  hears the sinner's prayer, 'Give me relief from my distress; be merciful  to me and hear my prayer' (1). Jesus Christ is God's Answer to this  prayer. Christ brings relief (salvation).This salvation arises from the  mercy of God. In Christ, we have a 'joy' and 'peace' which the world can  neither give nor take away (7-8). When the seeking sinner comes with  the question, 'Who can show us any good?' (6), the Gospel Answer is  always the same - Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. 
23rd March: Genesis 24:1-21 
The  servant was sent on a mission. He was 'to get a wife for...Isaac' (4).  When Christ entered Jerusalem (Matthew 21:1-11), He was on a mission. He  had come for His Bride, the Church (Ephesians 5:25; Revelation 21:2-3).  The servant was not to 'get a wife...from...the Canaanites' (3). The  Church is to be made 'holy,...a radiant Church, without stain or wrinkle  or any other blemish, but holy and blameless' (Ephesians 5:26-27). The  servant carried out his mission carefully and prayerfully (12-14). Jesus  was careful to fulfil the words of the prophet - entering Jerusalem 'on  a donkey' (Matthew 21:2-7). In His journey to the Cross, Jesus was  concerned with this one thing - 'to do the will of Him who sent me and  to finish His work' (John 4:34). The servant prayed, and the answer was  given (15-16). Not my will but Thine, Lord! 
24th March: Genesis 24:22-49 
The  detailed account of Isaac's marriage highlights the guidance of God. He  directs the life of His people. This is our testimony - 'the Lord...has  led me on the right road' (48). The great lessons of this story are  stated in verse 27 - (a) the 'steadfast love' of the Lord; (b) the  'faithfulness' of God; (c) the guidance of God - 'the Lord has led me';  (d) worshipping the Lord - 'Blessed be the Lord...'. We are to seek  God's guidance, rejoicing in His love and trusting in His faithfulness.  Looking to Christ, who went to the Cross for us, we are to say, with  Him, 'I have come to do Thy will, O God', 'I will praise Thee', 'I will  put my trust in Him', 'Here am I, and the children God has given Me'  (Hebrews 10:7; 2:12-13). To those who do His will, praising Him and  trusting Him, God will give much blessing - 'an overflowing blessing'  (Malachi 3:10). 
25th March: Genesis 24:50-67 
In  verse 60, we read of the blessing of God upon Rebekah - 'Our sister,  may you increase to thousands upon thousands; may your offspring possess  the gates of their enemies'. This refers to the long-term fulfilment of  God's promise to Abraham. Through the death of Christ, the Lamb of God,  'a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation,' will  sing the song of salvation, 'Salvation belongs to our God...and to the  Lamb' (Revelation 7: 9-10). This is what we must pray for in our own  community. In homes where Christ has not been honoured, there will be  transformation. The Lord's messengers will be received - 'Blessed is he  who comes in the name of the Lord!' - and the Lord's Name will be  praised - 'Hosanna in the highest!' (Matthew 21:9). Such blessing will  be given to those who spend time with God (63; Joshua 1:8). 
26th March: Genesis 25:1-18 
What  will we leave behind us? What will we pass on to the next generation?  In this passage of many names, there is a challenging contrast between  the influence of Abraham and Ishmael on the next generation. In verse  11, we read, 'After Abraham's death, God blessed his son Isaac'. In  verse 18, we find that 'Ishmael's descendants lived in hostility toward  all their brothers'. In Isaiah 52:13-53:12, there is a great prophecy  concerning the death of Christ. We read of His suffering, as He becomes  'an offering for sin'. We learn also of His glorious future - 'He will  see His offspring and prolong His days' (53:10). Unlike Abraham (175  years) and Ishmael (137 years), Jesus did not live a long life on earth  (33 years), yet 'He shall see the fruit of the travail of His soul and  be satisfied' - 'many' will be 'accounted righteous' (11). 
27th March: Matthew 14:1-14 
John  the Baptist was 'arrested' and 'put in prison' (3). Shortly after this,  he was 'beheaded' (10). John was a faithful man. He was 'faithful unto  death' (Revelation 2:10). His death arose directly from his faithfulness  to God. He died as a 'martyr'. Following the death of John, news came  to Jesus, who was to die as our Saviour. How did Jesus react to this  news?- First, 'he withdrew...privately to a solitary place (13). Then,  having renewed His strength in the presence of His Father (Isaiah  40:31), He stepped out again into the sphere of public ministry. He  continued on His way, the Way that would lead Him to the Cross. What are  we to learn from John, the faithful martyr, and Jesus, the faithful  Saviour, who gave Himself in death for us? We are to be faithful to God.  If suffering lies ahead of us, He will make us strong. 
28th March: Matthew 14:15-36 
We  read of the feeding of the five thousand (15-21) and the walking on  water (25-33), and our thoughts go to Calvary. From the feeding with  bread and fish, we move to the bread and wine, symbols of Jesus' body  broken for us and His blood shed for us (26:26-28). From the confession  of faith - 'Truly You are the Son of God' (33), we move to the Cross to  hear the centurion's words of faith; 'Surely He was the Son of God!'  (27:54). We see Jesus, the Man of prayer (23), the Healer (35-36), and  we look to the Cross, where we experience the healing influence of His  prayer for us; 'Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are  doing' (Luke 23:34). 'Thank You for the Cross, The price you paid for  us, How You gave Yourself, So completely, Precious Lord, Now our sins  are gone, All forgiven, Covered by your blood, All forgotten, Thank You,  Lord' (Mission Praise, 632). 
29th March: Matthew 15:1-20 
The  Pharisees were preoccupied with washing the hands (2), yet they missed  out on the most important thing - the cleansing of the heart. They were  obsessed with 'correct' religious ritual, yet they sent Christ to the  Cross. They honoured God with their words, yet in their hearts they were  far from Him (8). We must pray for the cleansing of the heart: 'Purify  my heart, Cleanse me from within And make me holy. Purify my heart,  Cleanse me from my sin, Deep within' (Songs of Fellowship, 475).  When Jesus was buried, He was wrapped in a 'clean linen cloth' (27:59).  This was followed by His mighty resurrection. Without lapsing into  hypocritical obsession with outward appearances, we make this simple  comment: the 'resurrection' of God's work among us will come as we pray  earnestly for the cleansing of our hearts. 
30th March: Matthew 15: 21-16:4 
Above  all Jesus' miracles, we celebrate His mighty resurrection from the dead  (28:5-7). This miracle is referred to in 16:4 - 'the sign of Jonah':  Jonah was raised from 'the belly of a huge fish', Jesus has been raised  from 'the heart of the earth' (12:40). We are to 'remember Jesus Christ,  risen from the dead' (2 Timothy 2:8). In the girl's healing (21-28), we  see the risen Lord's great triumph over evil - evil men tried to put  Him down, but He did not stay down (Acts 2: 23-24). In the feeding of  the crowd (36-37), we see the risen Lord's ongoing ministry of feeding  His people. Here, we compare verses 36-37 with the Lord's Supper: (a) He  took bread; (b) He gave thanks; (c) He broke it; (d) He gave it to the  disciples; (e) The bread is shared with the people; (f) All are  satisfied. All glory to the risen Lord ! 
31st March: Proverbs 2:1-15 
There  is a real call for spiritual growth here. We are to accept God's words,  storing up His commands, turning our ears to wisdom and our hearts to  understanding (1-2). If we are to grow in the fear and knowledge of God,  we must pray for insight and understanding. These blessings are greater  than silver and hidden treasure (3-5). In the Christian life, there is  both promise and warning. There is God's promise - you will be led in a  way that 'will be pleasant to your soul' (10). There is His warning -  make sure that you do not 'leave the straight paths to walk in dark  ways' (13). It is very important that we take time to read God's Word,  since it is 'the Lord' who 'gives wisdom'. We must listen for God's  Voice, speaking to us through Scripture (6). As we listen to Him, we  will be led in 'every good path' - protected and victorious (7-9).
1st April: Genesis 25:19-34 
Esau  was a fool. He chose his own way rather than the Lord's way. Jacob was a  'heel'! 'Born with his hand holding on to Esau's heel..., he was named  Jacob (Heel)' (26). A crafty twister, a manipulating cheat, there was  nothing about him that merited God's blessing. He was not superior to  Esau. Like Esau, Jacob was a sinner. Esau was not inferior to Jacob.  Both were guilty before God. Why, then - in God's purpose - does 'the  elder' (Esau) 'serve the younger' (Jacob) (23)? The answer is grace, the  'amazing grace' of God. Grace lifted Jacob. The glory belongs to God.  Grace could have lifted Esau. By grace Jacob valued the birthright  (God's blessing). His way of seeking God's blessing was devious.  Nevertheless, he was seeking for God - and God, in His grace, found him  and made him a new man (32:28). 'Wonderful grace of Jesus, Greater than  all my sin'! 
2nd April: Genesis 26:1-35 
'History  repeats itself'. Sin has a 'like father, like son' quality about it -  Isaac is like Abraham (7; 12:13, 20:2, 12-13), Jacob is like Isaac (7;  25:31,27:19). Grace repeats itself. God is faithful. He gives  forgiveness and victory over temptation (1 John 1:9; 1 Corinthians  10:13). He cannot deny Himself (2 Timothy 2:13). Deceived by 'the father  of lies' (the devil), 'man' denies the truth (John 8: 44). 'Let God be  true, and every man a liar' (Romans 3:4). In verses 19-22, there's 'the  story of the three wells' - 'Dispute', 'Opposition', 'Room'. Things went  from bad to worse, then there was progress. There is room for both,  when there is no more quarrelling. Isaac worshipped God, and was  recognised as God's man (25,28). We are to be recognised as God's  people, but remember - verse 34 - even the Lord's people can make  mistakes! 
3rd April: Genesis 27:1-40 
The  deception of Isaac by Jacob (prompted by Rebekah) is a sad episode, yet  God - in grace - really bestows His blessing on Jacob. Beneath Jacob's  deceit, there was a real desire to be blessed by God. To Esau (the late  arrival), Isaac says, 'I have blessed him - yes, and he shall be  blessed. I blessed him, and blessed he will remain' (33). Once the  blessing had been given, it could not be recalled. The blessing could  not be undone. Power bestowed by God could not be removed. This had  nothing to do with 'Jacob's righteousness'. It had everything to do with  God's faithfulness. The good work begun by God, will be completed by  Him (Philippians 1:6). This was true for Jacob (28:15). It is true for  us - 'All the promises of God find their Yes in Christ'. To this, we say  'Amen' and 'To God be the Glory' (2 Corinthians 1:20)! 
4th April: Genesis 27:41-28:9 
What  a tangled web! Jacob has cheated Esau. Now, Esau is saying, 'I will  kill my brother Jacob' (41). What are we to make of all this? We must  look beyond the human scene. Behind it all, there is 'God Almighty' (3).  God will fulfil His promises. Nothing will distract Him from His  ultimate purpose of salvation. We look at the complex series of events  involving Rebekah, Isaac, Jacob and Esau. God looks beyond all of that  to Jesus Christ. He looks beyond the nation of Israel. His purpose  concerns 'the ends of the earth' (Acts 1:8). 'The blessing of Abraham'  refers not only to the 'land' (4). There is also 'the promise of the  Spirit' (Galatians 3:14). We are to live 'by the power of the Spirit',  and not 'according to the flesh' as Esau did when 'he went to Ishmael  (the child of Abraham's unbelief...)' (9; Galatians 4:29). 
5th April: Genesis 28:10-22 
Just  another night (11)? No! - this was a night to remember, a night Jacob  would never forget. God came to him with His wonderful promise of love:  'I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you' (15).  At Bethel ('the house of God'), powerfully transformed by the presence  of God - 'Surely the Lord is in this place' (16) - , Jacob consecrated  himself to the Lord. 'If' (20) means 'Since'. See Romans 8:31, 'If  (Since) God is for us, who can be against us?'. Giving the tenth (22) -  this is not legalism, a kind of repayment scheme. There can be no  'salvation by works'. We are saved by grace (Ephesians 2:8-9). Our  giving must always be a heartfelt expression of thanksgiving to the God  of grace: 'Loving Him who first loved me'. We are saved 'to do good  works' (Ephesians 2:10) - not because we do good works! 
6th April: Matthew 16:5-23 
What  a contrast there is between Jesus Christ and the religious leaders of  His day. Three times, we are told to 'guard against...the Pharisees and  Sadducees' (6,11-12). These men had religion without salvation. They  claimed to have faith in God, yet they despised Jesus Christ, the Son of  God and Saviour of sinners. We are to guard against the 'Pharisees and  Sadducees'. We are to glory in Christ, God's Son, our Saviour. In  Christ, 'the Son of the living God' (16), we have a Saviour against whom  'the gates of hell shall not prevail' (18). Our faith is like Peter's -  sometimes strong (16-17), often weak (22-23). Our Saviour is always  strong. We 'are weak, but He is strong' - may we never 'outgrow' this  simple testimony, as we confess our sin and glory in our Saviour who  forgives sin. 
7th April: Matthew 16:24-17:13 
There  will come a time when the glory of God will be fully revealed - 'the  Son of man is going to come in His Father's glory' (27). Here on earth,  there are 'foretastes of glory divine': verse 28 may be understood in  connection with the transfiguration (2) - the divine glory of heaven  breaking through into our human life on earth. Revelations of glory  prepared these men for discipleship. They turned their eyes upon Jesus  (8). They looked full in His wonderful face (2). The things of earth  grew strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace (Mission Praise,  59,712) - 'Lord, it is good for us to be here' (4). The 'mountain top'  experience could not be preserved - no 'three shelters' (4)! We can  continue to worship, hear Jesus' words and look to Him (6-8), rejoicing  in His suffering for us (12) and awaiting His return to 'restore all  things' (11). 
8th April: Matthew 17:14-27 
Epilepsy is an illness. In this case, there was something more - demonic involvement (18). The  disciples failed and were called to greater faith (16, 20). They were  'greatly distressed'. Troubled by talk of His death, they failed to hear  this: 'He will be raised on the third day' (23). Jesus paid the annual  temple 'tax' (24-27). His first allegiance was to God, yet He did not  ignore His other responsibilities. There is a lesson for today's Church  here. We are to be one body of Christ - not two groups, 'spiritual' and  'social', each looking down on the other: 'too earthly-minded to be any  heavenly good', 'too heavenly-minded to be any earthly good'. We need  the high spiritual principles: 'we will devote ourselves to prayer and  the ministry of the Word' (Acts 6:4), but we must not forget the  ordinary things that need to be done! 
9th April: Matthew 18:1-14 
From  Jesus' reply to the question: 'Who is the greatest in the kingdom of  heaven?' (1), we learn much about the valued place children are to have  among us. Our attitude to children is to be marked by humility, respect,  responsibility and - above all - love. (a) humility: We teach the children. We can learn from them (2-4). (b) respect: Physically, we may look down on them. Spiritually, we must 'not look down' on them (10). They are to be highly valued. (c) responsibility: What kind of influence do we have on the children? - This is a question of the greatest importance (6). (d) love:  Our 'Father in heaven' loves the children (14). The kind of welcome we  give to children shows the kind of welcome we give to 'Jesus' who 'loves  the little children' (5). May God help us not to fail the rising  generation. 
10th April: Matthew 18:15-19:2 
Discipline  and forgiveness are not opposites. They belong together. Discipline is  to be part of our caring. If it is not carried out in a caring way, it  is not the discipline of the Lord. It is the expression of human  arrogance. Where there is a genuine desire to honour God and do His  will, we have more than some human beings imposing their own will upon  others. We have God at work, purifying His Church. The link between  discipline (15-17) and forgiveness (21-35) is prayer (18-20). Without  prayer, we will never achieve a true balance between discipline and  forgiveness. We must avoid a harsh legalism which knows nothing of God's  love. We dare not soft-pedal the moral demands of discipleship. God is  holy. God is love. We need both holiness and love - for the sake of the  'large crowds' who need the Saviour (2). 
11th April: Psalm 5:1-12 
This  is a morning prayer: 'morning by morning', we are to come before the  Lord 'in expectation' of His blessing (3). The Psalmist prays with great  earnestness. His prayer is a 'sighing' before God, a 'cry for help'  (1-2). He acknowledges the holiness of God: 'You are not a God who takes  pleasure in evil, with you the wicked cannot dwell' (4). The words of  verse 9 apply to every one of us. Paul quotes this verse in support of  the conclusion that 'all have sinned and fall short of the glory  of God' (Romans 3:13, 23). There is, however, a way of coming to God. It  is 'by His mercy' (7). Each of us has been declared guilty by God (10;  Romans 3:19-20). For the fallen, God has provided a way of forgiveness.  For the guilty, He has provided a way to gladness (11; Luke 2:10-11).  'Hallelujah! What a Saviour!' (Church Hymnary, 380). 
12th April: Genesis: 29:1-30 
The  tables are turned on Jacob. The trickster is tricked! The 'trick' was  according to the 'custom' that the elder daughter should be given in  marriage before the younger one (23, 25-26). Seven years became fourteen  years (18-20,27,30). Jacob did receive his heart's desire, but there  was a lesson to be learned: Going God's way is better than getting your  own way. 'All things work together for good to those who love God'  (Romans 8:28) - this doesn't mean that we always get what we want. We  must learn to 'let go and let God have His wonderful way', and to say,  'This God - His way is perfect' (Psalm 18:30). Out of love for Rachel  (18,20), Jacob served Laban for an extra seven years. We would serve  Christ better if we loved Him more. Jesus still asks the question, 'Do  you love Me?' (John 21:15-17). 
13th April: Genesis 29:31-30:24 
Leah  progressed beyond her own concerns (32-34) to the most important thing:  'This time I will praise the Lord' (35). Of the many children, the most  significant, in terms of God's purpose of redemption, was Joseph  (22-24). An answer to prayer, it was the work of divine grace (22).  'Rachel was barren' (31) yet the Lord gave her this testimony: 'God has  taken away my disgrace' (23). We move from one Joseph to another - the  husband of Mary, the mother of Jesus. We see an even greater work of  grace: the birth of our Saviour. Rachel was to have a second son,  Benjamin (24). Through Christ, God has many sons and daughters  (Galatians 4:4-5). Rachel rejoiced in the gift of a son, her son. We  rejoice in the gift of the Son, God's Son. Through the Spirit of God's Son living in our hearts, we are God's children and He is our Father (Galatians 4:6). 
14th April: Genesis 30:25-31:21 
Jacob  was still a complex character, trying to arrange his own prosperity  (37-43). There is, however, another, better reason for his prosperity -  God had promised to bless him, and God did bless him (28:15). Inner  desire, favourable circumstances, the divine Word - all three were  present in Jacob's decision to leave Laban and 'go to his father Isaac  in the land of Canaan' (18). (a) Inner desire - Jacob had been badly  treated by Laban, and he did not want to work for him any longer (2);  (b) Favourable circumstances - Jacob had grown 'exceedingly prosperous'  (43). He didn't need to keep on working for Laban; (c) The divine Word -  Inner desire and circumstances were not enough to confirm God's  guidance to Jacob. He needed God's command and promise (3). Let God  'guide' by His 'light and truth' (Psalm 48:14; 43:3). 
15th April: Genesis 31:22-42 
As  we try to unravel the complexities of Jacob's dealings with Laban, we  must remember this one thing: 'If the God of my father, the God of  Abraham and the fear of Isaac (the God before whom Isaac bowed in  reverence) had not been with me...' (42). This is the spiritual  dimension. We must not lose sight of this. Life can be complicated at  times, but we must not forget this: God is with us. Jacob, who was  renamed 'Israel' (32:28), confessed his faith: God is with me. Later on,  the nation of Israel confessed its faith in God: 'If it had not been  the Lord who was on our side...', it would have been disaster. 'Our help  is in the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth'. The Lord is  with us still. With the Psalmist, we say, 'Blessed be the Lord'. He is  the God of our salvation (Psalm 124). 
16th April: Genesis 31:43--32:21 
Jacob  and Laban were not exactly the best of friends. Nevertheless, they came  to an agreement that they would not continue feuding with each other  (52). Jacob prepares to meet Esau (1-21). From verses 9-12, we learn  some important spiritual lessons - (a) Make sure that God is your God, and not only the God of your father and grandfather (9). (b)  Confess your unworthiness of 'all the steadfast love and all the  faithfulness' of God (10). (c) Pray to God for salvation - 'Save me I  pray...' (11). (d) Stand on the promises of God - 'You have said...'  (12). Jacob, soon to be renamed Israel (32:28), was preparing to meet  Esau. There is, in his prayer, the way of being prepared for a more  important meeting: 'Prepare to meet your God, O Israel!' (Amos 4:12).  Confess your sin, pray for salvation, stand on God's Word - make it  personal! 
17th April: Matthew 19:3-30 
Even  though 'large crowds followed Him' still 'the Pharisees' opposed Jesus  (2-3). Jesus' teaching regarding marriage has perfect balance. Marriage  is God's purpose for 'male and female' (4-5). 'Others have renounced  marriage because of the kingdom of heaven' (12). There is no compulsion  in these matters. Each one must seek God's will. Celibacy should not be  viewed with suspicion. This way can also be chosen for the sake of the  Kingdom of heaven. It must not be suggested that celibacy is the only  truly 'spiritual' way. Jesus calls for humility (14,30). What we cannot  do for ourselves, God does for us (23-26). The Gospel humbles us and  exalts God. Before we can be exalted by God and with Him, we must be  humbled by God and before Him. 'Eternal life' (16) begins when,  conscious of our sin - 'Who then can be saved?' (25) - we look to Christ  alone for salvation. 
18th April: Matthew 20:1-28 
The  workers served for different lengths of time (1-7). They received equal  payment (8-16). This a parable of grace. Some have served the Lord a  long time. Some have served Him a short time. The length of time is not  the most important thing. More important is this: each one of us has  been saved by grace. We owe it all to the Lord, the Giver of salvation.  In verses 17-19, Jesus speaks of His death and resurrection. These are  the great events upon which our salvation rests (1 Corinthians 15:1-4).  If we are to follow Christ, we must walk the way of the Cross (22). He  suffered for us. We must be ready to suffer for Him. His glory did not  come without suffering. Our glory will not come without suffering. Do  not seek 'greatness'. Go the way of the Cross (26-28). 
19th April: Matthew 20:29-21:17 
Four  times, Jesus is called 'the Son of David' (30-31, 9,15). Christ is  greater than David. He is David's 'Lord' (22:41-46). Christ is not only  'the Son of David'. He is also the Son of God (Romans 1:3-4). We rejoice  with the Psalms of David. We rejoice even more in the Gospel of Christ.  Our response to Christ is to be marked by discipleship, depth and  devotion. Discipleship - The blind men 'received their sight and  followed Him' (34). They did not receive their sight and then forget  about Him. Grace is to be followed by gratitude. Those who have received  grace are to give themselves to the Lord in gratitude. Depth - The crowds were enthusiastic (8-9) but superficial (27:20-23). Pray for depth, a true and lasting response to Christ. Devotion - Pray that the spirit of praise will overcome the spirit of pride (15). 
20th April: Matthew 21:18-46 
Jesus  entered the city (10). He entered the temple (12). He went 'back to the  city' (18). He entered the temple (23). Here, we have the pattern for  Christian living - in the place of worship, out into the world, back to  the place of worship...Worship, witness, worship... The two go hand in  hand throughout the Christian life. We will encounter unbelief - even in  the place of worship (23). God's servants - the prophets - were  rejected (35-36). God's Son - Jesus - was rejected (37-39). We live in a  situation where the threat of judgment is very real (19). Nevertheless,  there is hope. Christ is 'the Church's one Foundation' (Church Hymnary,  420). Through Him, we will bear fruit which will bring glory to God  (42-43). We have been slow to believe, but God is 'swift to bless'. No  more 'I will not' - let there be repentance, entering God's Kingdom and  doing His will (29- 31). 
21st April: Proverbs 2:16-34 
We  read the warning about 'the adulteress': 'her house leads down to  death' (16-18). We also hear the warning of the Gospel: 'the wages of  sin is death' (Romans 6:23). We are told that 'none who go to her return  or attain the paths of life' (19). Left to ourselves, none of us would  return to God, none of us would find the way to life (Romans 3:10-12).  Some seek 'prosperity' (1). They seek 'a good name in the sight  of...men' (4). We must not, however, make these things the be-all and  end-all. There is more to life than material possessions, more than high  ratings in the popularity stakes. There is eternal life - 'the free  gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord' (Romans 6:23) -  and the forgiveness of sins - 'justified by faith, we have peace with  God through our Lord Jesus Christ' (Romans 5:1). 
22nd April: Genesis 32:22-32 
At  the place called Peniel, Jacob 'saw God face to face' (30). We see 'the  glory of God in the face of Christ' (2 Corinthians 4:6). Jacob wrestled  with God and became an overcomer (28). Christ wrestled with the powers  of evil, and has won a mighty victory for us. When He cried out from the  Cross, 'It is finished' (John 19:30), this was not an admission of  defeat. It was the declaration of victory - the victory has been won,  the victory is complete. 'Thanks be to God who gives us the victory  through our Lord Jesus Christ' (1 Corinthians 15:57). For Jacob,  crossing the Jabbok involved a spiritual 'crossing over'. Jacob became  Israel, a new man (28). After he had been 'touched' by God, Jacob was  'limping' (31-32). This was a reminder of his own weakness. His true  strength was in the Lord. Wait on the Lord, and renew your strength  (Isaiah 40:31). 
23rd April: Genesis 33:1-20 
From  Jacob's meeting with God, we come to his meeting with Esau. Before we  start thinking of this as a big 'come down', we should note Jacob's word  to Esau: 'truly to see your face is like seeing the face of God' (10).  Jacob is describing his meeting with Esau in terms of his encounter with  God at Peniel: 'I have seen God face to face (32:30). Before we dismiss  Jacob's words as 'a bit over the top', we should remember Jesus' words:  'as you did it to the least of these my brethren, you did it to Me'  (Matthew 25:40). We are not to choose between loving God and loving our  neighbour. We are to love both (Matthew 22:37-38). We honour God. We are  to honour other people. The two go together - reverence for God our  Creator and respect for people, created in God's image (1 John 4:20-21).  
24th April: Genesis 34:1-31 
This  chapter is about sin - the name of God is not even mentioned! We might  well say of this chapter: 'the less said the better'. We should,  however, notice that Jacob is still turning out to be a big  disappointment. Despite all Jacob's potential (28:15-17,20-22;  32:28-30), there is still, in him, a great deal of self and not very  much of the Lord. We see this in verse 30: 'You have brought trouble on me by making me odious...my numbers are few, and if they gather themselves against me and attack me, I shall be destroyed, both I and my household'. Where is God in all this? It seems that Jacob has become so  preoccupied with himself and his own interests that he has forgotten  all about God. Amazingly, the next chapter begins, 'God said to Jacob,  "Arise..."'. God was still calling him to higher things. What love! God  doesn't give up on us. He keeps on calling us back to Himself. 
25th April: Genesis 35:1-15 
'God appeared to Jacob again ...and blessed him' (9). The Lord's blessing does not come only once.  Again and again, He blesses His people, leading us on to a closer walk  with Him. God knows what we have been - 'Your name is Jacob' (10). He  knows how often we have failed Him, yet still, He loves us. Still, He  holds out before us a new and better future - 'Israel shall be your  name' (10). God is inviting us to enter into a future of fruitfulness  (11): 'I choose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit  and that you fruit should abide' (John 15:16). Special mention is made  of 'the place where God had spoken with him' - 'Bethel' (the house of  God) (15). We cannot expect to be fruitful witnesses if we are not  faithful worshippers. Listen for God's Word. Take His Word with you -  and share it with others. 
26th April: Genesis 35:16-36:43 
Two  prisoners looked out from the same cell. One saw the sunshine and the  other saw mud! - two ways of looking at every situation: 'Benoni' (son  of my sorrow), 'Benjamin' (son of the right hand) (35:18). Spot the  missing name in chapter 36? - God. Many never think of God (Psalm 10:4).  Esau's hardness of heart was more than personal. It has continued for  generations - 'two nations...two peoples...' (25:23). He has 'spiritual'  descendants too - God's Word warns us: 'See to it that no one fail to  obtain the grace of God...like Esau' (Hebrews 12:15-17). Salvation does  not come to us because of our good works (Romans 9:10-13). Every attempt  to save ourselves meets with the divine condemnation (Malachi 1:1-4;  Romans 3:19-20). Thank God for your own salvation. Never feel superior  because of it. Pray that hard hearts will be brought to Christ (1  Timothy 1: 12-17; Romans 1:16). 
27th April: Matthew 22:1-14 
Jesus  speaks in parables. Some hear, understand and believe. Others miss the  point altogether. One man was 'not wearing wedding clothes' (11). He was  dressed in the 'filthy rags' of his own 'righteous acts' (Isaiah 64:6).  He was not clothed in the righteousness of Christ (Revelation 21:1-2,  7:9-14). Without Christ's righteousness we are naked and ashamed. Sin  brings shame. Before sin, there was nakedness without shame (Genesis  2:25). After sin, 'they realized they were naked...and made coverings  for themselves' (Genesis 3:7). Spiritually we are naked before the  all-seeing eye of God (Hebrews 4:13). Christ says, 'buy from me...white  clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness' (Revelation  3:18). God says, 'Come, buy ...without money...Seek the Lord...call on Him... He will have mercy...He will freely pardon...' (Isaiah 55: 1, 6-8). Do you want to enter God's Kingdom? Make sure you are clothed in Christ's righteousness. 
28th April: Matthew 22: 15-33 
The  Pharisees were subtle - just like the 'ancient serpent who is the  devil' (Genesis 3:1; Revelation 20:2). They tried 'to entangle Jesus in  His talk' (15). They wanted to trap Him and bring a charge against Him.  They asked Jesus about payment of taxes to Caesar (17). Jesus moved  beyond this question to our greatest responsibility: 'Render ...to God  the things that are God's' (21). If we must speak words of political  significance - 'Render.. to Caesar the things that are Caesar's' (21) - ,  let them arise out of this: Giving God His rightful place in His  Church, the nation and the wider world. Jesus' words to the Sadducees,  in verse 29, were not simply a protest against the religion of the  Sadducees. They were a protest for the Scriptures and the power of God. A positive faith is much more helpful than a purely negative reaction! 
29th April: Matthew 22:34-46 
The  Pharisees had failed. The Sadducees had failed. Now, 'they come  together' (34). There were differences between them, yet they were  prepared to lay aside their differences and join forces in their common  opposition to Jesus. They were trying to get Him to set one commandment  above all the others. They would then say that He had insufficient  respect for the other commandments. Jesus answered them wisely: Love -  for God and our neighbour - embraces all the commandments. They  have fired questions at Jesus. Now, He puts a question to them (42). He  seeks to raise their thinking beyond the human level - Jesus is not  merely 'the son of David' (42). He is the Son of God. Greater than all  of the great men, He is 'our Lord and our God' (John 20:28). No more  trick questions. Give the answer of faith: 'You are...the Son of the  living God' (16: 16). 
30th April: Psalm 6:1-10 
What  a pitiful picture: 'languishing ... troubled ... sorely troubled ...  moaning ... tears ... weeping ... grief ... weak' (1-7). Transformation -  Overwhelmed by evil becomes overcoming evil. 'O Lord - how long?'  becomes 'The Lord has heard the sound of my weeping. The Lord has heard my supplication' (3, 8-9). We look at our circumstances. We ask,  'How long must this continue?'. We look at Christ's Cross. We say, 'He has won the victory'. His victory becomes ours, as we say, in faith, 'the  Lord accepts my prayer' (9). We look beyond our present circumstances to  Christ's Second Coming. When He returns, the tables will be turned. In a  moment, there will be complete shame for His enemies (10; 1 Corinthians  15:25) and complete salvation for 'those who are eagerly waiting for  Him' (1 Corinthians 15:51-52; Hebrews 9:28).
1st May: Genesis 37:1-36 
Here,  we have human sin and divine grace. We see jealousy (11) and its  effects: 'where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there will be  disorder and every vile practice' (James 3:16). There is God working out  His purpose: 'you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good'  (50:20). In his dreams, Joseph was given a glimpse of the 'new thing'  (Isaiah 43:19) God was about to do. Joseph's situation seemed hopeless:  'cast...into a pit', 'sold' into slavery (24,28). God was in this  situation. Each of us is in a 'pit', but we are not alone. Jesus has  gone into the 'pit' for us, and He has come out of it victorious: 'Death  is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your sting? O grave where  is your victory?'. Slaves of Satan, we have been set free by Christ  (Romans 6:17-18; Hebrews 2:14-15). God was with Joseph. He is with us. 
2nd May: Genesis 38:1-30 
'Judah  went down from his brothers, and turned in to a certain Adullamite...'  (1-2). This is the sad story of so many people: Drawn away by an  unbelieving man/woman from the fellowship of God's people. The story  then goes from bad to worse. A whole catalogue of disasters follows. God  is mentioned in only two verses (7,10). Both speak of human sin and  divine judgment. God's Word is clear: Believers are not to be joined in  marriage to unbelievers (2 Corinthians 6:14). Lower your spiritual  defences at this point, and you are asking for big trouble! Satan is  ready to sweep in and cause chaos. This sad story of sin and shame  stands as a warning to us. Do not rush into sinful choices. Put God  first, and let Him lead you in His perfect way: 'Seek first His Kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things shall be yours as well' (Matthew 6:33). 
3rd May: Genesis 39:1-23 
In  chapter 38, we read of unbridled lust. Here, we read of sexual  restraint: 'how can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?'  (9). Sin brings complications, and so does obedience! There is, in fact,  only one complication - sin. We live in a sinful world, which has no  real interest in obedience to God. We must be realistic: 'all who desire  to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted' (2 Timothy  3:12). Obedience and persecution - we see both in the story of Joseph.  He was tempted, but he did not sin (7-9). Temptation is not sin. God  provides 'the way of escape' (1 Corinthians 10:13). Christ is 'the way'  (John 14:6), God's way of escape. We go to Him when we are tempted  (Hebrews 2:16; 4:15-16). Joseph was put into prison, 'but the Lord was  with him, and showed him steadfast love' (20-21) - 'persecuted, but not  forsaken'' (2 Corinthians 4:9). 
4th May: Matthew 23:1-39 
As  you read Jesus' stinging words, remember this: there is a 'Pharisee''  in every one of us! Jesus disturbs the 'peace' of 'those who sit at ease  in Zion' (Amos 6:1). He invites us to see ourselves as God sees us:  'before Him no creature is hidden, but all are open and laid bare to the  eyes of Him with whom we have to do' (Hebrews 4:13). Why does Christ  speak such disturbing words? - He loves us. He longs for us to return to  Him and be forgiven. Many times He comes to us - 'How often would I  have gathered you'. Many times we refuse His appeal of love: 'you would  not' (37). You may have refused Him often, yet still He waits. Still, He  perseveres in love. Still, He seeks to show you the emptiness of your  life without Him - 'forsaken and desolate' (38). Still, He waits for you  to say, 'Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord' (39). 
5th May: Matthew 24:1-31 
After  the first two verses, concerned with the destruction of the temple,  Jesus speaks of 'the sign of His coming and of the end of the age' (3).  There will be times of testing (9,21). We must take care not to be drawn  away from Him (4,23-24). Beyond the time of testing, there will be the  return of the Lord (29-30). The events of our day are not without  significance. They are signs of His coming. We are to prepare ourselves  for His return. We must live as servants of the Gospel (14). This will  not be easy. There will always be opposition. Current affairs may be  confusing, but we must look beyond all this to 'the momentous event':  'the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great  glory' (30). Awaiting the Lord's return, we say, 'If no-one joins me,  still I will follow' (Mission Praise, 272). 
6th May: Matthew 24:32-25:13 
'The  times they are-a-changing'. There is, however, one thing that remains  constant. Jesus says, 'My words will not pass away' (35). In an age of  unbelief, our faith is often under threat. We must stand upon this solid  Rock: 'The Word of the Lord stands forever' (1 Peter 1:25). The  scoffers will say, 'Where is the promise of His coming?' (2 Peter  3:3-4). We are to believe that 'He is near' (33). Christ has risen. He  will return (1 Corinthians 15:20-23). When He returns need not  concern us: 'the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect'  (44). We are to be ready at all times (13) - doing the Lord's will (46).  We are to be 'faithful and wise' (45). As 'the bride of Christ'  (Revelation 19:7; 21:2), we await the Return of Christ our Bridegroom:  'Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet Him' (6). 
7th May: Matthew 25:14-46 
We  are to be faithful to God (21). There is a reward for faithfulness (29;  1 Corinthians 3:10-15). Our 'reward' is not to get more glory for  ourselves: 'what we preach is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord'  (2 Corinthians 4:5). Bringing glory to God - this is to be our greatest  joy. We are not to be thinking, 'What am I going to get out of this?'.  We are to be asking, 'What can I give to others?'. The 'righteous' are  not full of boasting about their 'righteous' actions (37-38). The Lord's  true servants do not draw attention to themselves. Do you have  'talents'? Yes - you do! Use them! 'Serve the Lord with gladness' (Psalm  100:2). Let this be your 'reward': the joyful privilege of bringing  blessing to others and glory to God. On earth, we begin to 'enter the joy of our Lord' (21). In heaven, there will be 'fullness of joy' and 'pleasure for evermore' (Psalm 16:11). 
8th May: Proverbs 3:5-18 
'Grow  in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ' (2  Peter 3:18). If we are to know the Lord, we must come to an end of  ourselves: 'Be not wise in your own eyes' (7), 'do not rely on your own  insight' (5). True knowledge of God comes through faith: 'Trust in the Lord...' (5). True knowledge of God is heart-knowledge: 'Trust in the Lord with all your heart' (5). Knowing Christ involves growing in grace. We cannot get to know  God apart from the grace of God working within us. Growth in grace is  not always a smooth pathway (11-12; Hebrews 12:5-11). Never forget: 'the  Lord's discipline' is an expression of the Lord's love. 'Lord, You are  more precious than silver, Lord, You are more costly than gold, Lord,  You are more beautiful than diamonds, And nothing I desire compares with  You' (13-15; Mission Praise,447). 
9th May: Genesis 40:1-23 
God  gave Joseph power to overcome temptation (chapter 39). Now, He gives  him power to interpret dreams. Here, Joseph the dreamer (37:5-11)  becomes Joseph the interpreter of dreams. Joseph may be viewed as a  prophet: 'Surely the Lord does nothing, without revealing His secret to  His servants the prophets' (Amos 3:7). As a true prophet, he gives the  glory to God alone: 'Do not interpretations belong to God?' (8). Joseph  became the forgotten man (23). For Joseph, life had become very  difficult. He had known prosperity (39:2-3). Now, he was suffering  adversity. God is in both our prosperity and our adversity. He uses  adversity to produce in us a heart of humility. What was Joseph doing  while he was in prison? He was keeping close to God, waiting patiently  for his 'time to speak' (Ecclesiastes 3:7). 
10th May: Genesis 41:1-57 
'After  two whole years', Joseph was still the forgotten man. Then Pharaoh had a  dream (1). This was the beginning of the next stage of God's plan for  Joseph. In the interpretation of Pharaoh's dream, Joseph directs  attention to God: 'It is not in me; God will give Pharaoh a favourable answer...God has revealed to Pharaoh what He is about to do...God has shown Pharaoh what He is about to do... the thing is fixed by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass (16,25,28,32). Joseph spoke with divine  authority because 'the Spirit of God' was living in him (38). God was at  work in Joseph, enabling him to forget his hardship and to be fruitful  in his affliction (51-52). This is the work of divine grace - a reversal  of human expectations. By God's grace, hardship and affliction lead not  to bitterness and resentment but to a deeper love for the Lord. 
11th May: Genesis 42:1-38 
'Joseph's  brothers...bowed themselves before him' (6): Remember Joseph's dream  (37:5-11)! God is fulfilling His purpose. This has nothing to do with  the glory of Joseph. It has everything to do with the glory of God.  Joseph was exalted to a place of honour because he was a man of God: 'I  fear God' (18). All the glory belongs to God alone! Joseph's treatment  of his brothers seemed harsh. In verse 24, we see another side of him:  'he turned away from them and wept'. Joseph loved his brothers. Behind  his 'harsh' words, there was love. He wanted them to recognize their sin  (38:18-33). He was paving the way for his reunion with them in  brotherly love. God loves us. Sometimes, His ways seem harsh, but they  are always for our best (Revelation 3:19; Hebrews 12:5-11). He shows us  how much our sin hurts Him so that we might see how much He loves us. 
12th May: Genesis 43:1-34 
The  roles have been reversed. At the beginning of Joseph's story, it seemed  that the brothers had control over his destiny (37:19-20). Now, Joseph  has the upper hand. Ultimately , it was the Lord who was in control. In  all the events of Joseph's life, God had been leading him towards the  re-uniting of the family through which He would work out His purpose of  grace. Joseph, the man at the centre of God's purpose, knew the God of  grace and desired that others might also know the blessing of the  gracious God (29). Benjamin was Joseph's only full brother. The others  were step-brothers (29:31-30:24; 35: 16-18). Joseph had a special  affection for Benjamin (30). In the love of Joseph for Benjamin, we see  God's love for us: 'My compassion grows warm and tender' (Hosea 11: 8);  'I have loved you with an everlasting love' (Jeremiah 31:3). 
13th May: Genesis 44:1-34 
God  is fulfilling His purpose: 'the brothers fell before Joseph to the  ground' (14; 37:7, 10). God's purpose is moving towards its ultimate  fulfilment: 'that at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow'  (Phillipians 2:10). As God's purpose moves forward, the brothers are  being changed from men who sold their brother into slavery to men who  will welcome him again as their long-lost brother (37:28; 45:15). God  wants to change us - 'Jesus, You are changing me, By Your Spirit You're  making me like You. Jesus, You're transforming me, That Your loveliness  may be seen in all I do.You are the potter and I am the clay. Help me to  be willing to let You have Your way. Jesus, You are changing me, as I  let You reign supreme within my heart' (Mission Praise, 389). Bowing the knee to Jesus Christ begins here and now. 
14th May: Genesis 45:1-28 
In  the reunion of Joseph with his brothers, there is a great testimony to  the God of grace: 'Do not be distressed... because you sold me here; for  God sent me before you to preserve life...God sent me  before you to preserve for you a remnant on earth, and to keep alive for  you many survivors. So it was not you who sent me here, but God... God has made me lord of all Egypt' (5,7-9). Joseph was the pioneer. He went  ahead of the others. He paved the way for them. Jesus is 'the Pioneer  of our salvation'. He will 'bring many sons to glory'. He will welcome  us as His 'brothers' (Hebrews 2:10-12). Jesus is also the 'Perfecter of  our faith' (Hebrews 12:2). He is leading us to 'a better country - a  heavenly one' (Hebrews 11:16). Let 'every tongue confess that Jesus  Christ is Lord' (Philipians 2:11). Let it begin here on earth. 
15th May: Matthew 26:1-13 
Jesus  was on His way to the Cross (2). His death was the direct result of the  hatred of men (3-4). It was also the supreme demonstration of the love  of God (Romans 5:8). In verses 6-13, we read of a woman who loved Jesus  very much. Jesus was deeply moved by her great love for Him. He wanted  everyone to know about her deep devotion to Him: 'Truly, I say to you,  wherever this Gospel is preached in the whole world, what she has done  will be told in memory of her' (13). We read in Acts of the advance of  the Gospel (1: 8). Great crowds became believers (2:41; 4:4; 6:7). In  all of this, Jesus says to us, 'Don't forget the woman. Don't forget her  love'. Love for Jesus - simple, sincere, childlike love - this is the  most important thing of all: 'O for grace to love Him more' (Church Hymnary, 676). 
16th May: Matthew 26:14-35 
Peter  and Judas Iscariot had something in common. They both failed their Lord  (14-16, 34). Things turned out very differently for them (27:3-5; Acts  2:38-42). When we fail the Lord , we find ourselves at a cross-roads. We  can turn to Him. We can turn away from Him. In view of His great love  for us - His 'blood' has been 'poured out for the forgiveness of sins'  (28) - how can we turn our backs on Him? How can you and I say 'No' to  such love? There is no reason why we should say 'No' to Him - yet we do!  Do we doubt that He is there for us? Do we wonder if He really loves  us? What about you? Do you think that He cannot or will not forgive your  sins? He can and He will. That's why He died - 'for the forgiveness of  sins' (28). 
17th May: Matthew 26:36-56 
Jesus'  suffering is increasing. What pain His disciples caused Him. Three  times, He 'found them sleeping' (40-45), 'My betrayer is at hand' (46),  'all the disciples forsook Him and fled' (56)! Was this the end of the  road for His disciples? No! With one exception - Judas Iscariot, whom  Jesus still called 'friend' (50), the others became men of prayer (Acts  1:13-14). They stood with Peter as he preached the Gospel, as he led  many sinners to the Saviour (Acts 2:14,37-38). Jesus loved His  disciples. He died for them. Then - after Jesus was 'glorified' - the  Spirit was 'given' to them (John 7:39). The fleeing disciples became men  'on fire' (Acts 2:3). No more 'fleeing'. Now it was 'flowing' - 'rivers  of living water' (John 7:38). 'Blaze, Spirit blaze. Set our hearts on  fire. Flow, river, flow. Flood the nations with grace and mercy' (Mission Praise, 445). 
18th May: Matthew 26:57-75 
'Peter followed Him at a distance'  (58). He didn't want to get too close! Keeping your distance from Jesus  leads to trouble! Trouble was not the end of Peter's story. Three times Peter denied the Lord (69-75). Three times Jesus asked him, 'Do you love me?', three times Peter answered Jesus, 'I love You' (John 21:15-17) - For each denial, an opportunity to re-affirm his love for Jesus. Three thousand souls won for Christ (Acts 2:41) - For each denial, one  'thousand souls' brought to Christ. The contrast between the 'Peter' of  the Gospels and the 'Peter' of Acts is striking. When Jesus first met  Peter, He said, 'You are Simon...You shall be called Peter' (John 1:42).  'Peter' means 'rock'. Peter's confession of faith - 'You are the  Christ, the Son of the living God' (16:16) - is the Rock on which our  faith is built. With Peter, let us confess Christ. 
19th May: Psalm 7:1-17 
Scripture  speaks to us of both judgment and salvation (6,10; Hebrews 9:27-28).  The Gospel brings salvation, - 'God sent the Son... that the world might  be saved...'. There is also a warning - 'he who does not believe is  condemned already, because he has not believed in the Name of the only  Son of God' (John 3:17-18). The Lord does not wish 'that any should  perish, but that all should reach repentance'. Nevertheless, there will  be 'the day of judgment and destruction of ungodly men' (2 Peter 3:9,7).  What is happening here on earth? - 'the wicked man...makes a pit...and  falls into the hole which he has made' (14-15). What does God say about  this? - 'If a man does not repent, God will whet his sword...' (12),  'God... commands all men everywhere to repent' (Acts 17:30). God calls  for 'repentance' and 'faith in our Lord Jesus Christ' - 'Repent and  believe the Gospel' (Acts 20:21; Mark 1:15). 
20th May: Genesis 46:1-34 
Jacob goes to Egypt. There were three factors in Jacob's guidance: Inner desire - He wanted to see Joseph; Circumstances - Joseph wanted to see him and his sons were going to take him; God's Word - God told him to go. With God's command there was also His promise - 'I will there make of you a great nation'. There was no need for fear  because God would be with him (3-4). Life would not be easy in Egypt -  'every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians' (34). We live in a  world which does not honour Christ as 'the Good Shepherd' (John  10:11,14), 'the Great Shepherd' (Hebrews 13:20-21), 'the Chief Shepherd'  (1 Peter 5:4). In Christ, we are 'a holy nation'. Why has God made us  His 'own people'? - 'that you may declare the wonderful deeds of Him..'  (1 Peter 2:9). 'The nations are waiting for us, waiting for the gospel  we will bring' (Songs of Fellowship, 539). 
21st May: Genesis 47:1-26 
Jacob  and Joseph - the two stories are one. Christ and the Christian - our  story is bound up with His story. Jacob reflects on his life - 'What has  it all amounted to?'. He does not sing his own praises (8-9). Let the  glory be given to God and not kept for ourselves. Joseph provided food  for his family (12). Jesus has provided for us something better than  food (Matthew 4:4) - 'an eternal redemption' (Hebrews 9:12). Grateful to  Joseph for what he had done for them, the people said, 'You have saved  our lives...we will be slaves' (25). Saved by Christ we are to be  'slaves' of Christ (Romans 6:17-18). We belong to Christ. We are to  serve Him. We look to Him to 'give us seed (His Word)...that the land  may not be desolate' (19; Mark 4:14; Isaiah 55:10-11; Psalm 126:5-6). We  'sow'. We 'reap'. 'God gives the growth' (1 Corinthians 3:6-7) ! 
22nd May: Matthew 27:1-26 
Jesus  went to the Cross for us. Refusing to protest His own innocence, He  took our guilt upon Himself. Observing this, 'the governor wondered  greatly' (14). We also should wonder greatly at this - Christ took our  place, receiving the punishment that should have been ours. Barabbas was  released, Christ was crucified (26). This is the great exchange - the  sinless Saviour takes the place of the guilty sinner (2 Corinthians  5:21). As well as its divine aspect - 'God so loved...' (John 3:16) -  the Cross has a human dimension - the people, Jews and Gentiles (the  whole sinful world), sent Jesus to the Cross. For Jews and Gentiles  ('the whole world'), Christ has provided salvation (Romans 1:16; 1 John  2:2). In the release of Barabbas and the crucifixion of Christ, we are  invited to ask ourselves, 'What shall I do with Jesus who is called  Christ?' (22). 
23rd May: Matthew 27:27-54 
The  'King of the Jews' wore 'a crown of thorns' (29). In the Cross, we see  the King. The way of crucifixion - this is the way of the Kingdom. The  prayer, 'Thy Kingdom come' (6: 10), could only be answered by way of the  Cross. From the Cross, we hear the call for decision. It is the call of  love. The love of Christ calls for our answer: 'What shall I do with  Jesus who is called Christ?' (22). Here, we see different responses to  Christ - derision, mocking, reviling (39-44); misunderstanding (47-49);  believing worship (54). How are we brought out of unbelief and into  faith, out of derision and into rejoicing? By the mighty working of God  in our hearts, we are brought out of darkness and into light (2  Corinthians 4:6). Salvation comes from above, from God - 'The curtain of  the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom' (51). 
24th May: Matthew 27:55-66 
'Mary  the mother of James and Joseph' was also the mother of Jesus (56;  13:55). She began by receiving Jesus, not only as her son but also as  her Saviour (Luke 1:38). She was still following Jesus - 'kept by the  power of God' (1 Peter 1:5). None of us - not even the mother of Jesus -  can walk with the Lord without His grace keeping us in the way of  faith. The unbelieving world still denies Christ - 'that imposter' (63) -  and His resurrection - 'fraud' (64). As believers, we must maintain our  testimony: 'He has risen from the dead' (64). The unbelievers expected a  'fraud'. They did not expect a resurrection! For them, a resurrection  was out of the question. God had a surprise in store for them! Unbelief  says, 'Resurrection? - Impossible!'. Faith says, 'it was impossible for  death to keep its hold on Him' (Acts 2:24). He has risen (28:6) -  Hallelujah! 
25th May: Proverbs 3:19-35 
'You  will walk on your way securely...for the Lord will be your confidence'  (23,26). Trusting in the Lord, we are to say, 'He knows the way that I  take; when He has tested me, I shall come forth as gold' (Job 23:10).  Our faith is under threat. There is the danger of 'sudden panic' (25).  We are faced with the 'man of violence...the perverse man...the  wicked...the scorners...fools' (31-35). What are we to do? Even in the  most testing and trying times, we must hold on to this: God is at work  for our holiness - 'Refiner's fire, my heart's one desire is to be holy.  Set apart for You, Lord, I choose to be holy, set apart for You, my  Master, ready to do Your will' (Songs of Fellowship, 475). Submitted to God's holy purpose, we rejoice in this: Nothing can separate us from His love (Romans 8:39). 
26th May: Genesis 47;27- 48:22 
No more fear (46:3). No more pride (47:9). Now, no more doubt - God will bless (15-16, 19-21). Let it be confidence (Philippians 1:6), humility (John 15:5) and faith (Hebrews 11:1; Philippians 3:14). Man's way is set aside - 'his younger  brother shall be greater than he' (19). We are 'saved by grace'  (Ephesians 2:8). There is one way of salvation - God's way (John 14:6).  Israel was promised a 'land' (21). In Christ, we are being led on to 'a  better country...a heavenly one' (Hebrews 11:16). Jacob said, 'I am  about to die' (21). Jesus says, 'I died and...I am alive for evermore'  (Revelation 1:18). He says, 'I will come again and will take you to  myself, that where I am you may be also' (John 14:3). No more fear,  pride, doubt - Christ saves 'to the uttermost' (Hebrews 7:25). 
27th May: Genesis 49:1-27 
Jacob  blesses his sons, 'blessing each with the blessing suitable to him'  (28). The most significant blessings are reserved for Joseph (22-26).  This is not simply the blessing of Jacob. This is the blessing of 'the  Mighty One of Jacob...the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel...the God of your  father...God Almighty' (24-25). God blesses us 'with blessings of  heaven above, blessings which are mighty beyond the blessings of the  eternal mountains, the bounties of the everlasting hills' (25-26). He  does this for us in Jesus Christ, the fulfilment of the divine purpose  within which Joseph was privileged to take his part. 'God... has blessed  us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places'  (Ephesians 1:3). What blessings He has given to us - the forgiveness of  sins, the Holy Spirit, eternal life (Ephesians 1:7,13-14)! 'Bless the  Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits' (Psalm 103:2). 
28th May: Genesis 49:28- 50:26 
It  was a time of 'very great and sorrowful lamentation' (10). Jacob had  died (33). Soon, Joseph would be gone (26). God was still there. He had  been there in the past (20). He would be there in the future (24-25).  Times are hard. We rejoice: 'The steadfast love of the Lord never  ceases'. An earthly life has ended. We say, 'His mercies never come to  an end'. We cannot cope. We discover that 'His mercies are new every  morning'. Everything seems to be changing. We trust in God's unchanging  love: 'Great is Thy faithfulness'. It seems hopeless. We say, 'I will  hope in the Lord' (Lamentations 3:22-24). 'Bad' things are happening to  you. Do you need to be 'reassured... and comforted'? - 'God meant it for  good...Do not fear'. The Lord 'will provide for you' (20-21). Whatever  happens, remember this - God is in control, and He loves you (Romans  8:28)! 
29th May: Matthew 28:1-10 
The  resurrection declares Christ's victory over evil, the triumph of His  love. There is no need for fear: 'He has risen' - His 'perfect love  casts out fear' (5-6; 1 John 4:18). There has to be a new beginning in faith. First, there was a new beginning 'in fact - Christ has been raised from the dead' (1 Corinthians 15:20). Christ  has won the victory over the grave. Christ has taken the sting out of  death (1 Corinthians 15:54-57). Between the new beginning in faith -  making disciples (19) - and the new beginning in fact - Christ's  resurrection - , there is worship (9). The fact is not dependent on our  feelings. 'He has risen' (6-7) - the fact stands, even when many doubt  and few worship (17). As we worship, we are strengthened in faith,  strengthened for our task. We are to invite people to come to the place  where 'they will see' Jesus (10). We are to 'make disciples' (19). Run  and tell - with great joy (8)! 
30th May: Matthew 28:11-20 
Why  is it so important that we 'make disciples' (19)? There is a devil, and  he is doing his utmost to hinder the progress of God's truth. He  spreads lies about Christ - 'to this day' he is still sowing seeds of  unbelief (11-15). We must combat the enemy of Christ - with words of  truth, with the believing declaration, 'He has risen' (6-7). Satan  failed to halt the progress of the Gospel. Christ's disciples rose to  the challenge, and so must we: 'Rise up, you champions of God...We'll  reach this generation...Go forth! Jesus loves them. Go forth! Take the  Gospel. Go forth! The time is now. The harvest is ripening; Go forth!  Feel now the burden of the Lord. Feel how He longs to save them. Feel  now for those who never heard...Now is the time' (Songs of Fellowship, 486). 'All authority...has been given to Me...I am with you always' (18-20). 
31st May: Psalm 8:1-9 
The  Lord is 'majestic' (1,9). He does not remain remote. He does not keep  His distance. He show us His greatness, the greatness of His love. We  feel forgotten. He remembers us. We feel unloved. He cares for us (4).  We are tempted. He will 'still the enemy' (2). We look beyond our  creation (5-8) to our salvation - 'we see Jesus, who for a little while  was made lower than the angels, crowned with glory and honour because of  the suffering of death, so that by the grace of God He might taste  death for everyone...that through death He might destroy him who has the  power of death, that is, the devil' (Hebrews 2:8-9,14). This is  'Majesty' - 'Jesus, who died, now glorified, King of all kings'. The  Name of the Lord is majestic 'in all the earth' (1, 9). To God - Father,  Son and Holy Spirit - we pray, 'Glorify Your Name in all the earth' (Mission Praise. 454,142).
1st June: Exodus 1:1-2:10 
Things  were difficult for Israel yet 'the more they were oppressed the more  they multiplied' (12). Difficult times can be the making of God's  people! Pharaoh (and Satan!) is murderously anxious about the growth of  God's people (15-16; John 10:10). God is about to move in saving power -  His 'midwives' are preparing for the 'birth' of His redeemed people  (17,20). Moses was preserved in 'a basket made of bulrushes' (2:3). Born  again, we are preserved through God's Word and Spirit - 'the living and  abiding Word of God' (1 Peter 1:23). Moses was drawn out of the water  (2:10). Israel was drawn out of the bondage in Egypt (6:6-8). Like  Israel, we have been redeemed by blood (12:13; 1 Peter 1:18-19).  Redeemed by the Lord, we are to be consecrated to Him. In 20:1-2, 'the  Ten Commandments' are introduced by a declaration of God's salvation.  Our obedience to God is to be grounded in this: He has redeemed us! 
2nd June: Exodus 2:11-3:22 
Salvation,  service, personal faith, life among God's people - God has much to  teach us. Moses sins (2:12). God graciously forgives (Micah 7:18-19) -  this is salvation. His sin forgiven, Moses is called to service. He is  called by the eternal God, the God who draws near to His people  (3:14-15). Saved by Christ, we are called to serve Him, the eternal  'God' who 'became flesh and dwelt among us' (John 1:1-14). Saved, we  belong to God's people (1 Peter 2:10). Serving, we play our part within  the 'one body' of Christ (Romans 12:4-5). Moses was to serve God's  people, the people whose prayer God answered - delivering them from  bondage and leading them on to great blessing (2:23-25; 3:8). Moses was a  key figure, but he did not stand alone. The work of God made progress  because the people of God went forward together. In God's work, we are  to be participators - not spectators! 
3rd June: Exodus 4:1-31 
Two  great obstacles had to be overcome - Moses' sense of inadequacy and  Pharaoh's stubborn resistance. Moses had to learn that 'our competence  comes from God' (2 Corinthians 3:5). Part of God's provision for Moses  was Aaron (14-16). We are not called to go it alone. What encouragement  there is in the support of our fellow-believers. Weak believers need  strengthening. Stubborn unbelief (Pharaoh) is ready to overwhelm us. We  need strength if we are to 'attempt great things for God' and 'expect  great things from God' (William Carey). Concerning Pharaoh, God says, 'I  will harden his heart' (21). This was also Pharaoh's own choice -  'Pharaoh hardened his heart' (8:15,32; 9:34). God sent circumstances  into Pharaoh's life which led him to harden his own heart by rejecting  God's Word. Pharaoh's resistance did not hinder God's salvation - he was  'compelled by a mighty hand' (3:19). God is at work - make sure you  don't miss out on His blessing! 
4th June: Exodus 5:1-6:13 
In  4:29-31, we see Moses, the elders and the people worshipping God.  Pharaoh opposes them - 'Who is the Lord, that I should heed His  voice...?' (2) - , and 'the foremen of the people of Israel' start  complaining (19-21). What does Moses do ? - He prays. Notice the honesty  of his prayer - he asks the 'Why ?' question, and he protests, 'You  have not rescued Your people at all' (22-23). God gives His answer -  redemption will be given (6:1,6-8). Redemption - this is God's answer to  our suffering. He gave His Son to suffer for our sins. Through Christ,  we receive salvation. Moses had to learn to wait for the fulfilment of  God's promise. God's own people were not listening to him. How could he  expect the unbelieving Pharaoh to listen to him (6:9,12)? It was not  easy. Nevertheless, this 'charge' had been given - 'bring the people  out'. It shall be done! 
5th June: Mark 1:1-20 
This  is a new 'beginning'. The prophets had spoken. Now, the Saviour has  come. This is good news. John has prepared the way. Now, he stands aside  to make way for Jesus Christ, the Son of God' (1,11). Following Jesus'  baptism, there was temptation. This was Kingdom against kingdom. Satan's  kingdom was under threat. The Kingdom of God had come. Christ triumphed  over Satan. In Him, we triumph when, hearing the Gospel declaration -  'the Kingdom of God is at hand' - , we obey the Gospel command - 'repent  and believe the gospel' (15). With the command, 'Follow Me', there is  the promise, 'I will make you...' (17). Christ's call is 'full of grace  and truth' (John 1:14). It is truth - a call to discipleship. It is  grace - a call from Jesus. In Christ, we become 'a new creation' (2  Corinthians 5:17). We become 'fishers of men' (17). 
6th June: Mark 1:21-2:12 
Great  things were happening. God was moving in power. In all this, we could  easily overlook something very important: Jesus prayed (35). He made  time for prayer. This was not wasted time. This was time well spent.  Jesus was mighty before men - the power of God was flowing freely. Jesus  knew where the power comes from - He was humble before God. We long for  this - 'they were all amazed and glorified God, saying, "We never saw  anything like this!"' (12). We must pray in faith, bringing people  before the Lord, convinced that such prayer 'is powerful and effective'  (2:5; James 5:16). "If my people...pray..., I will...forgive their sin  and heal their land' (2 Chronicles 7:14). "O Holy Ghost, revival comes  from Thee. Send a revival. Start the work in me. Thy Word declares Thou  wilt supply our need. For blessing now, O Lord, I humbly plead' (Mission Praise, 587). 
7th June: Exodus 6:14-7:24 
This  list of names emphasizes that God is concerned with the 'little  people', and not only the 'the big names' like Moses. Gifted individuals  have their important place in carrying forward God's purpose. Such  individuals are used by God for the blessing of the whole people of God.  The forward movement of God's work is often preceded by great  difficulties. We must 'walk by faith, not by sight' (2 Corinthians 5:7).  Adverse circumstances must not defeat us. The Lord is calling us on to  greater faith. God's purpose of grace moves forward according to His  power and not our weakness. Moses spoke 'with faltering lips' (30). God  worked miracles (8-24). Turning to 'sorcerers' and 'magicians', Pharaoh,  the servant of Satan, 'would not listen' to God's servants  (11,13;7:22). 'Our God is marching on' - to glorious victory (Church Hymnary, 318)! 
8th June: Exodus 7:25-8:32 
God's  work is 'in the midst of the earth'. He claims His own people for  Himself (22-23). To 'all the ends of the earth', He says, 'Turn to Me  and be saved'. Concerning His own people, He says, 'In the Lord all the  offspring of Israel shall triumph and glory' (Isaiah 45:22,25). In the  plagues, we see God's power and Pharaoh's pride. There is a conflict  between the reality of God and Pharaoh's fantasy. Conflict is God's  training ground for spiritual growth. We take our stand on the reality  of God. Those who oppose God live in a fantasy world, imagining that  they can successfully oppose the mighty God of salvation - 'To pluck  from His hand the weakest, trembling soul, it never, never can be done' (Sacred Songs and Solos.  508). Pharaoh was neither the first nor the last to oppose God- and  fail! Put to death by men, Christ was raised by God (Acts 2:23-24) -  Hallelujah! 
9th June: Exodus 9:1-35 
Today,  we highlight three lessons: The importance of trusting Christ as your  Saviour, the folly of refusing Christ's salvation and the danger of  professing conversion without really meaning it. Each of us must choose:  Will you step into Christ or remain outside of Him? Will you flee to  Him and take refuge in Him or will you neglect Him and remain under  judgment? 'Flee from the wrath to come'. 'How shall we escape if we  neglect such a great salvation?' (20-21; Luke 3:7; Hebrews 2:3). You can  enter into salvation through faith in Christ or you can, in unbelief,  remain outside of Christ (Hebrews 4:2-3). Pharaoh 'confessed' his sin,  but didn't really mean it. He had had 'enough' of God's interference.  That was his 'reason' for admitting his sin. This was not real  repentance - only a dislike for suffering! Make your decision for  Christ, and make it real! 
10th June: Exodus 10:1-29 
The  conflict between God and Pharaoh is a conflict between light and  darkness. We are to shine as lights - for God, the 'Light' in whom there  is 'no darkness at all' (Matthew 5:16; 1 John 1:5). God's purpose is  moving forward. Pharaoh becomes more determined in his rebellion.  Pharaoh's stubborn unbelief becomes his own undoing. Pharaoh doesn't  want God. God confirms him in his unbelief (28-29). God says, 'You can  go your own way, but you will be spiritually dead' (Psalm 106:13-15).  God says, 'Do not harden your heart. You may be very close to the point  of no return' (Hebrews 3:8; Proverbs 29:1). Before you lose all  inclination to return to the Lord, let Christ's love touch your heart.  Only His love can 'create in you a clean heart'. Only His love can 'put a  new and right Spirit within you' (Psalm 51:10). 
11th June: Exodus 11:1-12:28 
Here,  we focus attention on two verses which emphasize the importance of  being saved by the Lord and going on to live for Him: 'when I see the  blood, I will pass over you...you must eat unleavened bread' (13,20). In  verse 13, we are directed beyond the Passover to Jesus Christ, whose  blood was shed for the forgiveness of sins (John1:29; 1 John1:7). In  verse 20, we have the call to holy living. In 1 Corinthians 5:6-8 and  Galatians 5:7-9, Paul uses 'leaven' as a symbol of 'sin', which holds us  back from 'running a good race'. We are to live as a new creation, who  feast on 'the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth'. Forgiveness of  sins and holy living belong together. We are not to rejoice in God's  forgiveness and then gloss over His call to holy living: 'justified by  faith', we are to 'walk in newness of life' (Romans 5:1; 6:4) 
12th June: Exodus 12:29-13:16 
God  delivered His people from their bondage (3,14,16). There is, in the  Exodus, a great picture of the Gospel, which sets us free. Christ sets  us free. He does this by His Word of 'truth' (John 8:32,36). The Gospel  says, 'Sin will have no dominion over you...You have been set free from  sin' (Romans 6:14,18,22). Through 'the Spirit of God', we have received  'not...the spirit of slavery...but...the spirit of sonship' (Romans  8:14-15). Israel's deliverance from the land of bondage was also  deliverance for a new life in 'a land flowing with milk and honey' (5).  We look back in grateful remembrance. We look forward in eager  anticipation. We have received 'the first fruits of the Spirit'. There  is more to come - 'the glorious liberty of the children of God...the  redemption of our bodies' (Romans 8:21-23). 
13th June: Exodus 13:17-14:31 
Sin  may be 'near', but God never leads His people into it (13:17, James  1:13). Following Christ means walking a narrow road (Matthew 7:13-14).  We are surrounded by many temptations. Pray that your feet will not slip  (Psalm 37:31; 17:5; 44:18). Sometimes, the Lord leads us 'by way of the  wilderness' - a way of apparent fruitlessness. Why? - So that 'equipped  for battle', we might learn to serve Him better (13:18). The Lord does  not leave His people in the wilderness. Pursued by their enemies (the  Egyptians), they were guided by the 'cloud' and 'fire' (13:21-22). God  was with them, and He was about to reveal His saving power in a mighty  way (13-14). There is judgment as well as salvation (30). Looking to  neither the 'right' nor the 'left', we must look to the Lord (14:21-22).  Rejoicing in 'the great work' He has done, our faith 'in the Lord'  grows strong (31). 
14th June: Exodus 15:1-21 
This is a song of redemption - God has redeemed His people; a song of thanksgiving - we give thanks for God's redemption; and a song of hope - we look forward to the complete fulfilment of God's redemption. This  is not only a 'song of God's people'. It is also the song of Moses, a  personal song. This is worship - not a mere formality, but worship which  arises from the depths of Moses' heart. Deeply moved by the grace and  glory of God, Moses pours his heart out to God in worship: (i) He  praises the God of grace - 'my strength...my song...my salvation' (2).  (ii) He praises the God of glory - God triumphs 'gloriously' (1). His  'glorious' power is demonstrated in His 'glorious' deeds (6,11). (iii)  Worshipping this God of grace - the redeeming God (13) - and glory - the  reigning God (18) - , we say, 'You are my God, and I will praise You'  (Psalm 118:28). Let us worship God - personally as well as publicly. 
15th June: Mark 2:13-3:12 
Jesus  changes people. Levi became Matthew (14). He became 'a new creation' (2  Corinthians 5:17). The change of name marked his new birth (John 3:6).  To be changed by Jesus you must recognize yourself as a sinner (17).  There is a world of difference between legal obedience - 'old wine' -  and Gospel obedience - 'new wine' (21-22). There is an eternity of  difference between belonging to God's Kingdom and remaining outside of  His Kingdom (John 3:3,5,7). The religion of the Pharisees was  legalistic. The obedience of Jesus was spiritual. Will we follow Jesus,  or will we be like these 'religious' men who planned 'to destroy Him'  (6)? It is sadly possible to participate in 'religion', professing faith  in 'the Son of God', in an 'unclean spirit' (11). Prompted by the Holy  Spirit, let us truly confess that 'Jesus is Lord' (1 Corinthians 12:3). 
16th June: Mark 3:13-35 
The  conflict intensifies. The 'twelve' are 'sent...to cast out demons'  (14-15). Jesus is accused of being demon-possessed (22). Jesus warns  against 'an eternal sin' - blasphemy against the Holy Spirit (28-30).  With the offer of forgiveness - 'the blood of Jesus...cleanses us from  all sin' - , there is the call to 'confess our sins' (1 John 1:7,9). 'If  we say we have no sin' (1 John 1:8,10) and no need of Jesus Christ as  our Saviour, we resist the Holy Spirit who seeks to convict us of our  sin and lead us to the Saviour (John 16:8-9,14). Are you anxious about  'an unpardonable sin' ? Let the Holy Spirit lead you to the Saviour.  Take your sin to Jesus, and let His 'perfect love cast out your fear' (1  John 4:17). Do you think you cannot be forgiven ? God's thoughts are  'higher': 'Return to the Lord...He will abundantly pardon' (Isaiah  55:6-9). 
17th June: Proverbs 4:1-9 
This  is 'a father's instructions' to his 'sons' (1). The father has been a  'son' (3). He has wrestled with temptation. He has needed the  exhortation - 'Let your heart hold fast...' (4) - and the warning - 'Do  not turn away...' (5). Now, we turn to the divine Father and Son. The  Father does not keep His distance from us. Through the Son, He has come  near to us. Through the Son, we come to the Father (John 14:9,6). When  Scripture says, 'Get wisdom' (7), it means this: 'Come to the Father  through Jesus the Son'. Wisdom brings 'a beautiful crown', 'the crown of  righteousness', 'the unfading crown of glory' (9; 2 Timothy 4:8; 1  Peter 5:4). Be wise. Be ready for the Lord's Return (Matthew 25:1-13).  'Purer...higher...greater - Our wonder, our worship, when Jesus we see!'  (Church Hymnary, 374). 
18th June: Exodus 15:22-16:36 
God  allows His people to suffer difficulties. Why? - To strengthen our  faith (15:25; 16:4; Deuteronomy 8:2,16; 1 Peter 1:6-7). He chastens us,  to teach us repentance (Revelation 3:19). Don't forget God's love. He is  faithful: 'He didn't bring us this far to leave us'. He shows us His  glory (7). He assures us that He is God (12). He provides us with 'daily  bread' (4). Yesterday's 'bread' is insufficient for today's challenges  (19-20). 'Morning by morning', the 'bread' is to be gathered (21;  Lamentations 3:22-23). Jesus is the Living Bread (John 6:32-35,48-51).  Feed on Him each day. Don't invite spiritual starvation by missing days.  If you miss some days, don't let it continue. Remember: 'Seven days  without prayer makes one weak'! 'How long has it been since you talked  with the Lord?' Too long? It is time to pray and feed on Jesus! 
19th June: Exodus 17:1-18:27 
Worldly  people create problems (17:3). Moses asks, 'What shall I do...?'  (17:4). Indecision asks, 'Is the Lord among us or not?' (17:7). He gives  victory (17:8-9,13). Joshua is being equipped for special service - 'in  the ears of Joshua' (17:14). God's great concern is that His people  move forward together. The work is not to be left to the few (18). God  is looking to faithful servants who will 'bear the burden' together  (21-22). There is much to be done, but we must never forget this:  'prayer and the ministry of the Word' (Acts 6:1-4). You may not be a  Moses or a Joshua, but you can play your part. We rejoice in who God is  and what He has done for us. Assured of His presence with us, let us  worship Him: 'Blessed be the Lord...' (18:10-11). 
20th June: Exodus 19:1-25 
Before  law, there is Gospel - what God has done for us (4). We are to obey in  the Spirit of grace, as those who have been redeemed by His mercy (5-6; 1  Peter 2:9-10). God's Word is not only for the leader. It is for the  whole people of God (3,7,9,11). God speaks to us concerning possession,  consecration and reverence. Possession - We are His 'own possession' (5). In love, He has claimed us for Himself. We belong to Him. Consecration - God is holy. We are to be holy (10,14; 1 Peter 1:15-16). Reverence - Don't rush into God's presence, presuming on His blessing. We must  not take God's blessing for granted. That would be arrogance (21-22). We  must come to Him with this humble confidence: God will bless those who  truly call upon Him (2 Chronicles 7:14-16). May God help us to say, 'All  that the Lord has spoken we will do' (8). 
21st June: Exodus 20:1-20 
God  does not want to see sin in us (20). He wants to see Himself in us. Sin  robs us of His great blessing. He wants to fill us with love (Mark  12:28-31; Galatians 5:14; 1 Corinthians 13:1-13). Before our love for  Him, there is His love for us. He is the God of redemption. He has  redeemed us. We are His people. This is His doing. All the glory belongs  to Him (1-2). We are to live as His people. He is to have first place  in our lives (3). The 'law' is 'holy' and 'good', but it cannot make us  holy and good - without 'the new life of the Spirit' (Romans 7:12,6:  8:2; 2 Corinthians 3:3). 'Moses' cannot save! There is only one Saviour -  Jesus! Not under law, we yield ourselves to the God of salvation  (Romans 6:13-14). Our obedience comes from faith in Christ - not  legalism (Romans 1:5-6)! Our holiness comes from the Spirit (Galatians  5:22-23). 
22nd June : Mark 4:1-34 
God's Word carries this message: 'He who has ears to hear, let him hear what the Spirit says...' (9; Revelation 2:7,11,17,29; 3:6,13,22). We must listen for the voice of the Spirit. Grace has been 'given' to us (11). It is God's gift. To God be the glory! Sadly, some refuse to listen. Think about your response to God's Word (15-20). Let your light shine (21-23; Matthew  5:16). Use your gifts, or lose them (24-25). We preach the Word. God  gives the growth (26-29; 1 Corinthians 3:6-7). A small child can count  the seeds in an apple. Only God knows how many apples there are in a  single seed! God's Word is a 'seed' which bears much fruit (30-32; 1  Peter 1:23-25). Parables whet the appetite - for more! They were given  to people 'as they were able to hear it' - 'a starter' (33-34)! May we be 'visual aids' to whet people's appetite - for God! 
23rd June: Mark 4:35-5:20 
Jesus was sleeping because He was tired - not because He didn't care (38)! He does care. Everything was under control. Faith was being tested. Fear and  faith are opposites (40). 'Awe' (41) is very different from unbelieving  fear. Awe leads to worship. Fear destroys faith. The man was filled with  'unclean spirits' (13). He was a 'demoniac' (15-16). No one could do  anything for him (3) - except Jesus! They tried to 'subdue' him (4).  Jesus saved him! He is able to lift from the guttermost...and 'save to  the uttermost' (Hebrews 7:25). The human situation is hopeless  (Ephesians 4:18-19; 2 Corinthians 4:4) - without Christ! With Him,  everything changes (2 Corinthians 4:6; Ephesians 4:22-24). ''The gates  of hell prevail against' us. They do not prevail against Christ (Matthew  16:18). Tell others what the 'Lord has done for you' - God will use  your words to bring blessing (19-20). 
24th June: Mark 5:21-6:13 
The  story begins with Jairus (21-24). Then, there is an 'interruption' -  which brought healing to a woman (25-34). The woman had nowhere else to  go (25-26). She came to Jesus (27). She was healed - not because she  touched His garment (many others were brushing against Him), but because  she had 'faith' (28,31,34). Jesus brought her out into the open - so  that she might confess Him (30,32-33). The new birth can take  place in very quiet circumstances - by faith in Christ. Jesus wants us  to 'come out' - to confess Him. Back to Jairus' daughter - People  thought there was no hope. Jesus said, 'Do not fear, only believe'  (35-36). Not everyone believes. We can limit the power of Christ among  us - by our unbelief (5-6)! We can, however, be called, sent and given  authority...(7) - Never forget: The power and glory belongs to God (1  Corinthians 1:27-29). 
25th June: Mark 6:14-44 
They  were great men of God - 'John the baptiser...Elijah...the prophets of  old' (14-15). None of them can compare with the Lord Jesus Christ. These  men directed attention to the Lord (1 Kings 18:36-39; Isaiah 52:  13-53:12; Jeremiah 31:31-34; Ezekiel 36:25-27). Of Christ alone, we say,  'There is salvation in no one else...' (Acts 4:12). Christ saves - and  satisfies: We feed on Him and we are 'satisfied' (42). Apart from Him,  the human search ends in this: 'I can't get no satisfaction'. In Him,  there is satisfaction - He is the Saviour. Saved, satisfied and sharing -  this is what we are to be. To His disciples, He still says, 'You give them something...' (37). We say, 'We don't have enough'. He says, 'I am more than enough' (2 Corinthians 3:5). Many are 'like sheep without a  shepherd'. We must not fail them. We must 'teach them many things'  (34). 
26th June: Mark 6:45-7:23 
The  storm is raging: 'they were making headway painfully, for the wind was  against them' (48). Jesus draws near, and there is peace: 'the wind  ceased' (51). Another 'storm' continues to rage: 'Why do your disciples  not live according to the tradition of the elders...?' (5). How did  Jesus respond to this 'storm' of criticism? - He exposed the hypocrisy  of those who made the tradition of men more important than the Word of  God (7-9,13). He invited 'the people' to come 'to Him', to 'hear', to  'understand'. His Word was addressed to 'all' of them (14). Jesus  emphasizes this point: 'man looks on the outward appearance, but the  Lord looks on the heart' (1 Samuel 16:7). The heart of the matter is the  matter of the heart. Which will it be? - 'Their hearts were hardened'  (52) or 'Loving the Lord your God with all your heart' (12:30). 
27th June: Mark 7:24- 8:26 
Verse 27:  The Gospel is for all - Jews and Gentiles (John 3:16). It seems like a  'refusal'. It is not. In love, Jesus says, 'Show me that your faith is real'. First things 'first': Do you really want to be blessed by the Lord ? Or, are you content with 'going through the  motions' of religious ritual. Is God's Word going in one ear and out  the other (deaf)? Are you ashamed of the Lord (dumb)? Jesus 'makes the  deaf hear and the dumb speak' (37). Jesus feeds those who are hungry -  for Him. To those who say, "'Yes, Lord, even the crumbs', so long as it  comes from You", Jesus gives much - and we are 'satisfied'  (28;8). Don't settle for 'the leaven of the Pharisees' (15) - second  best (by a long way!) - when you can have Jesus, the very best! 'Open  our eyes, Lord. We want to see Jesus' (22-26; Mission Praise, 545). 
28th June: Mark 8:27-9:13 
'Who do you say that I am ?': Jesus puts this question to all of us. Some believe He is the Christ. Others do not. Some try to 'sit on the fence'. Everyone makes their response to Him. God is not  deceived by outward observance of religion, when it masks an inward  refusal to receive Christ as Saviour, to submit to Him as Lord. On the  day of judgment, God will not be looking for respectability. He will be  looking for faith (Luke 18:8). Peter confessed Christ (29). Then,  he was overcome by Satan (33). He became 'puffed up' with pride (1  Corinthians 8:1). He forgot that faith comes from divine revelation  (Matthew 16:17). We are not 'to rebuke' the Lord (32). Looking to 'Jesus  only' (8; Romans 4:5), we are to live as His disciples (34) - not of  this world, as He is not of this world (John 17:14,16; 1 Corinthians  2:12; 2 Peter 1:3-4). 
29th June: Mark 9:14-50 
'Our  God is able' (Daniel 3:17). Do we believe this? There is no doubt about  God's power. What about our faith? We come to Jesus, saying, 'If you  can'. Jesus turns things around: 'If you can! All things are  possible to him who believes' (22-23). This is not so much an appeal for  positive thinking. It is a call to prayer (29). Less self-confidence  and more confidence in God - This is what we need. God's greatness is  more important than our 'greatness' (33-35). Are there things that you  don't understand? Don't be afraid to ask (32). You may even learn from  those who 'don''t belong to our group' (38-40). They don't belong to our  group? So what? Do they belong to Christ? That's what matters. 'It is  better' (43,45,47) to be Christ's - than anything else! May our faith,  though 'tested by fire', grow strong - to God's glory (49-50; 1 Peter 1:  6-7). 
30th June: Psalm 9:1-20 
'I  will give thanks to the Lord...'(1-2). The enemy is defeated (3-6).  'The Lord sits enthroned for ever' (7). 'The Lord is a stronghold for  the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble' (9). What an  encouraging Psalm this is: We have the victory in Christ. Nevertheless,  it is not easy when we face determined opposition from the enemies of  Christ and His Gospel: 'Behold what I suffer from those that hate me'  (13). In this situation, we must call upon the Lord: 'Arise, O Lord! Let  not man prevail' (19). Though the conflict is raging all around, we  must - taking our stand in Christ - declare God's praises and rejoice in  His salvation (14). 'The Lord dwells in Zion' (11): 'Blest inhabitants  of Zion, Washed in the Redeemer's blood', may we always say, 'Let the  world deride or pity, I will glory in Thy Name' (Church Hymnary, 421).
1st July: Exodus 20:21-21:32 
So  many instructions - Don't get bogged down in details. Remember this: We  do not live by an ethic of legalism. This is an ethic of redemption (20:1-2). Forget the God of redemption, and you have nothing but a lot  of rules and regulations. Become obsessed with rules and regulations,  and there will be no room for the Redeemer and His redemption.  'Earmarked' for Jesus, we are to 'serve Him for life' (6). No turning  back! We are bound to Him by love - not law! What love He has for us!  Verse 30 speaks of 'ransom' and 'redemption': What great words of the  Gospel (Mark 10:45; 1 Peter 1:18-19)! 'Eye for eye...' (24) - This  limits vengeance. Remember: Love is the answer - not vengeance  (Leviticus 19:18)! Let Christ's love give you strength - to keep on  serving Him (Galatians 2:20; Philippians 1:6). 
2nd July: Exodus 21:33-22:31 
We  travel from grace to glory - from 'Egypt' to 'the promised land'. In  the wilderness there are many pitfalls. We can become careless in our  obedience to Christ. Do not 'leave a pit open' - you may cause a brother  to stumble (33; Romans 14:13). Restitution (1-17) - Be faithful in  practical matters (Luke 19:8; 3:10-14). Read of 'the thief' (8). Think  of the Lord - and be ready for His return (1 Thessalonians 5:2; Matthew  6:19-21). All our human problems are to be brought 'before God'. Never  forget Him (8-9,11). God is 'compassionate' (27). We are to be  'consecrated' (31). God loves us. Will we continue to live as those who  have never known His love? - 'God forbid! How can we who died to sin  still live in it?' (Romans 6:2). 
3rd July: Mark 10:1-31 
The  Pharisees came to Jesus - 'to test Him' (2). They asked Him about  divorce (2). He spoke to them about marriage (6-9). We need to be  positive, well grounded in the basic principles of God's Word. When the  thorny problems come - as they surely will - we will face them with  maturity, and not as 'children, tossed to fro and and carried about with  every wind of doctrine' (Ephesians 4:14). Jesus loved the little  children (13-16). Do we? Some say 'No' to the love of Jesus (21-22). Say  'Yes' to Him. We cannot save ourselves. Salvation is God's doing, not  ours (26-27). Don't let 'self' take the place of Christ: 'we have  left everything...' (28). Don't say, 'I have given so much to God, done  so much for Him, given up so much for Him'. God has given you more! God  has done more for you! God has given up more for you! John 3:16. 
4th July: Mark 10:32-52 
Jesus  was 'going up to Jerusalem' - to the Cross (32). He came to die, 'to  give His life as a ransom for many' (45). The death of Christ lies at  the very heart of the Gospel (1 Peter 1:10-12; 1 Corinthians 1:23 & 2  Corinthians 5:18-21; 1 John 1:7, 2:2; Hebrews 2:9). Don't think, 'Glory  for me' (37). Think, 'Glory to God' (43-44): 'God forbid that I should  glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ' (Galatians 6:14).  Bartimaeus cried out to the Lord for mercy (47). 'How embarrassing',  some people thought - 'how undignified' (48). When God is at work, some  people don't like it! They like everything to be dignified - dull and  dead! When God is at work, people get converted. This may not please the  'critics', but it pleases God - and that's what matters. Cry to God for  mercy. Your prayer will be heard - and answered. 
5th July: Exodus 23:1-33 
God  is love: He loves 'the stranger' (9). God is holy: He 'will not acquit  the wicked' (7). He wants to reproduce His love and holiness - in us.  Not holiness without love: that is self-righteous legalism. Not love  without holiness: that is spineless sentimentalism. To Israel, He sent  'an angel...' (20). To us, He has sent Christ: He is the Way to  the place prepared for us (John 14:2-3,6). Through the Holy Spirit,  Christ continues His ministry among us (John 14:25-26). 'Pay attention'  to the words of Christ. 'Listen' for the voice of the Holy Spirit (21).  Do not 'quench' or 'grieve' the Holy Spirit (1 Thessalonians 5:19;  Ephesians 4:30). It may take time - 'little by little' (30) - but God will work through his obedient people - 'I will...you shall...' (30-31). 
6th July: Exodus 24:1-18 
Moses  was alone with the Lord - receiving the Word of the Lord (1-2). Moses  went to the people - speaking the Word of the Lord (3). There was also a  written ministry of the Word (4). At the heart of our worship, there is  'the blood of the covenant' (8; 12:13; John 1:29; Hebrews 9:22; 10:4;  9:13-14; 1 John 1:7). Moses worshipped on 'the mountain of God' (12-18).  We worship 'in spirit and truth' (John 4:19-24). We come to the Father  through Christ and in the Spirit (Ephesians 2:18). We come on the basis  of Christ's blood shed for us (Hebrews 10:19-22). We come as those to  whom the Spirit has been given (John 1:33; 3:34). With 'the Spirit of  God' living in us and helping us as we pray, let us feast on Christ, the  Truth, the living Word, to whom the written and spoken word point us  (Romans 8:9,26; John 14:6; 1:1,14; 17:17). 
7th July: Exodus 25:1-40 
This is full of Christ! We don't 'read into' the Old Testament things which aren't really there. We read this part of Scripture in the light of the full revelation of God. We see Christ as the Central Theme. Above everything  else and everyone else, there is Jesus Christ our Saviour. God dwells  among His people (8). Christ lives in us (Galatians 2:20; Colossans  1:27). God is merciful to us (17-22; Psalm 103:8-12; Micah 7:18-19).  Through Christ, we have received 'mercy' (Ephesians 2:4-7; Titus 3:4-7).  From 'mercy' we move on to 'testimony' (18). The two are vitally  related (1 Timothy 1:12-17). The 'bread of the Presence' (30) turns our  thoughts to the Cross. The 'lampstand of pure gold' calls us to shine  brightly for Christ, who 'came...to save sinners' (1 Timothy 1:15). 
8th July: Mark 11:1-33 
Here we learn of the authority of Christ. Calling the 'colt' into His service, He says, with authority, 'The Lord has need of it' (3). With authority, He speaks to the fig tree (14) - a  'visual aid' of His teaching: 'Every branch of Mine that bears no  fruit, He takes away' (John 15:2). In the temple, He speaks with  authority, 'My house shall be called a house of prayer...' (17).  He speaks of authority in prayer: 'whatever you ask in prayer, believe  that you have received it, and it will be yours' (24). The religious  leaders did not understand Jesus (27-33). Why? - They didn't love Him.  We can experience His authority: His Word spoken to us 'in power...' (1  Thessalonians 1:5). We can exercise His authority: Through prayer,  setting His Word free to do His mighty work (Ephesians 6: 18-20) - if we  are learning to love Him! 
9th July: Mark 12:1-44 
Jesus  - God's 'beloved Son' (6): Rejected by men, raised by God (10-11).  Jesus' enemies tried 'to trap Him in His talk' (13). He spoke with  wisdom - and so can we. Anointed by the Holy One, we have the mind of  Christ (1 John 2:19-20; 1 Corinthians 2:14-16). Christ's enemies knew  'neither the Scripture nor the power of God' (24). We are to speak as  those who know the living God (27). Our 'first' priority is love for God  (29-30). Jesus says, 'Love your neighbour' (31). This is not, however,  'the be-all and end-all' of our life. There is more. We must not forget  God. Jesus is 'Lord' (35-37). Let it be: Jesus is my Lord. The scribes had all the external trappings of religion - and nothing else (38-40)! The 'poor widow' had very little, yet she had everything that really matters: she loved the Lord (41-44)! 
10th July: Exodus 26:1-37 
From  the outside, it was a 'tent'. On the inside, the tabernacle was a place  of great beauty. Many look at Christ, and see 'no beauty that we should  desire Him' (Isaiah 53:2). The believer looks at Christ, and says, 'You  are beautiful beyond description, too marvellous for words, too  wonderful for comprehension, like nothing ever seen or heard' (Mission Praise,  788).The 'veil' has been removed (2 Corinthians 4:3-4,6). Our sin had  separated us from God, hiding His face from us (Isaiah 59:2). When  Christ died, 'the curtain of the temple was torn in two...' (Mark  15:37-38). He has changed everything (Hebrews 9:7-8,11-12). Once, we  were 'separated...alienated... strangers...far off'. Now, we are 'in  Christ Jesus' - 'brought near in the blood of Christ' (Ephesians  2:12-13; Hebrews 10:19-22). 
11th July: Exodus 27:1-19 
We highlight two interesting phrases - (a) 'as you were shown on the mountain' (8); (b) 'towards the sunrise' (13, New International Version).  We need both 'the Scriptures' and 'the power of God' (Mark 12:24). Our  faith is based on divine revelation - 'according to the Scriptures' (1  Corinthians 15:3-4). We are 'not' to 'go beyond what is written' (1  Corinthians 4:6). Face the risen Son - We may not always be facing the  rising sun, but we should always be facing the risen Son! The  revelation, the resurrection, the Scriptures, the Son - these are the  great focal-points of our Christian Faith: God has revealed Himself,  Christ has risen. Encouraged by the Scriptures, and empowered by the  Son, we face the risen Son and we say, 'I will proclaim the glory of the  risen Lord' (Romans 15:4; Matthew 28:18-20; Mission Praise, 14). 
12th July: Mark 13:1-37 
We  are not to be a people whose 'faith' is locked in the past! We are to  be a people of hope. We look to the future. We 'see the Son of man  coming in clouds with great power and glory' (26). There may be 'wars  and rumours of wars' (7). When Christ returns, only one thing will  matter: 'he who endures to the end will be saved' (13). 'This day - the  noise of battle': Look beyond all that to 'the victor's song' (Church Hymnary, 481). In human conflict, there is so much of self - 'We are the people'. When Christ returns, nothing will matter but this: 'When the roll is called up yonder, I'll be there' (Mission Praise, 759). We hear of 'wars and rumours of wars'. Do we say, 'This is part of our history. It's always been this way'?. We must remember: Preaching Christ's Gospel is far more important than 'defending' our ways (10)! 
13th July: Proverbs 4:10-19 
'The  path of the righteous is like the light of dawn, which shines brighter  and brighter until full day' (18). Face the risen Son. His life in us is  like the rising sun. It begins with 'the first gleam of dawn'. It  'shines ever brighter until the full light of day''. Christ 'dawns on us  like the morning light' (2 Samuel 23:4). In a moment of discovery, we  say, 'It's just dawned on me'. It is very wonderful when Christ reveals  Himself, when He brings us out of our darkness and into His light. This  is just the beginning. There is so much more: 'No eye has seen, nor ear  has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who  love Him' (1 Corinthians 2:9). 'Light has dawned that ever shall blaze...Light a flame within my heart... Let my flame begin to spread' (Mission Praise, 422; Songs of Fellowship, 339). 
14th July: Exodus 27:20-29:9 
The 'lamp' was 'set up to burn continually' (27:20) - 'May we be a shining light...Let the flame burn brighter...' (Songs of Fellowship 389; Mission Praise, 743). A 'royal priesthood', we have been called by God - to let His light shine (1 Peter 2:9). He has called us to serve Him (28:1 John 15:16; Acts 20:28; 13:2; 9:15;  Hebrews 5:4). The divine call is accompanied by a divine empowering -  'the Holy Spirit sent from heaven' (1 Peter 1:12). We are precious to  God - Our 'names' are written on His heart (9-12,21,29-30; Luke 10:20;  Phillipians 4:3; John 10:3). In Christ we are cleansed (29:4 1 John 1:7), anointed (29:7; 1 John 2:27) and robed (29:5-6,8-9; Isaiah 61:10). In Christ, we have 'the best robe' (28:2;  Luke 15:22; Revelation 7:9-10,13-14). In Him, we are 'consecrated' by  the Word and 'anointed' by the Spirit (28:3,41; John 17:17; 14:16-17, 26; 16:13-14). 
15th July: Exodus 29:10-46 
There is a great contrast between the many sacrifices of the Old Testament and the one sacrifice of Christ (Hebrews 9:25-28; 10:1-4, 10-14). Looking to  Christ, we focus attention on verses 42-46. For God's people, 'the tent  of meeting' was a special place concerning which God said, 'I will meet  with you, to speak there to you. There I will meet with the people of  Israel, and it shall be sanctified by My glory' (42-43). Let us pray  that, in both the pulpit and the pew, there will be the glory of God.  Aaron and his sons were 'consecrated to serve' (44). We look beyond them  to Christ who 'came ...to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for  many' (Mark 10:45). He dwells among us (45; John 1:14). He has provided  for us a 'better' redemption than the redemption of Israel from Egypt -  He is 'much more excellent' (46; Hebrews 8:6; 9:23-24). 
16th July: Exodus 30:1-38 
The Word of God ('the testimony') declares the mercy of God, leading to our meeting with God (6). We highlight several features of our worship: (a) 'the blood of the sin offering of atonement' (10) - This points to the 'how much more' sacrifice of Christ on the Cross for us (Hebrews 9:13-14); (b) 'washing' (18) - Christ 'has washed us from our sins in His blood' (Revelation 1:5; 1 Corinthians 6:11; Titus 3:5-6); (c) 'holy anointing oil'  (25) - We are to be 'consecrated', 'most holy', servants of the Lord,  'making holiness perfect in the fear of God', living in the power of the  Holy Spirit (29-30; 2 Corinthians 7:1; Zechariah 4:6); (d) 'incense'  (35) - We are to be 'the aroma of Christ', spreading His 'fragrance' (2  Corinthians 2:14-16). Christlike living is grounded in prayer (Psalm  141:2; Revelation 5:8; 8:3-4; Luke 18:1; Ephesians 6:18; 1 Thessalonians  5:17). 
17th July: Mark 14:1-25 
Jesus  was surrounded by enemies, 'seeking to kill Him' (1). There was also a  hypocrite, preparing 'to betray Him' (10-11). What a joy it was to find a  woman with such heartfelt love for Him (3-9). Her love for Christ must  never be forgotten (9). There is something else which must never be  forgotten - His love for us. Our love for Him can never begin to  compare with His love for us. When we celebrate the Lord's Supper  (22-24; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26), we rejoice in His love. Think  little of your love for Him. Think much of His love for you. 'Who His  love will not remember? Who can cease to sing His praise? He can never  be forgotten throughout heaven's eternal days' (Songs of Fellowship, 168). Remember Christ, and let your remembering be filled with worship (25; Ephesians 5:19-20; Colossians 3:16-17). 
18th July: Exodus 31:1-32:14 
'Called' by God and 'filled' with His Spirit (31:1-3), Bezalel had the support of Oholiab and 'all able men' (31:6). Few may be called and equipped to lead, but many are required for God's work to be done - effectively (1 Corinthians  12:4-10). 'All' of us receive our strength from the 'Spirit' (1  Corinthians 12:11). We offer ourselves in service with this faith,  'Jesus is Lord'. Faith is God's gift: 'no one can say "Jesus is Lord"  except by the Holy Spirit'. There are many gifts. They are varied  expressions of one gift: the faith which confesses that 'Jesus is Lord'  (1 Corinthians 12:3). The people fell into idolatry and immorality  (32:6): a 'warning' to us (1 Corinthians 10:6-12). We have God's help -  to overcome temptation (1 Corinthians 10: 13). Moses sets for us a godly  example: he spent time with God, hearing His voice and prevailing in  prayer (32:1,7-14). 
19th July: Exodus 32:15-33:23 
In Moses, we see the holiness and love of God: a deep hatred of sin (32:19), an intense longing for sinners to  be forgiven (32). Filled with 'the fear of the Lord', Moses was  fearless before men. God's Word to sinners is clear: He warns them  (Proverbs 29:1); He calls them to repent (Acts 2:38); He invites them to  return to Him (Hosea 6:1). Moses' faithful and fearless preaching  emerged from his closeness to God: 'The Lord spoke to Moses face to  face, as a man speaks to his friend' (11). Moses prayed; God heard; God  answered (33:17). Moses prayed for a revelation of God's glory (33:18).  God revealed Himself as the good God, the God of grace and mercy  (32:19). Let us go up to God and bring down all that is needed to build  the Body of Christ that God may take pleasure in it and that He may  appear in His glory (Haggai 1:8). 
20th July: Exodus 34:1-35 
God  gives His promise (33:19). God keeps His promise (5-7). The glory of  Christ is revealed to those who are learning to love Him (John 14:21).  We are not yet ready for the full glory (33:20). When Christ returns, 'we shall see Him as He is'  (1 John 3:2). There is to be 'no other god' but the Lord (14). We are  not to be squeezed into the world's mould (Romans 12:2). 'No molten  gods', 'no graven image' - We are to be remoulded by God, 'conformed to  the image of His Son' (17; 20:4; Romans 12:2; 8:29). Moses' face was  shining - Other people noticed (29)! Let others see Christ in you. Never  take pride in your own spirituality - 'If anyone imagines that he knows  something, he does not know (the Lord) as he ought to know (Him)' (1  Corinthians 8:2). Keep your eyes on Jesus. The glory comes from Him. No  glory for me - All glory to Him (2 Corinthians 3:18)! 
21st July: Mark 14:26-52 
After  'they had sung a hymn' (26), Peter showed that there was a great deal  of 'self' in him (29). All of us can be like this - 'they all  said the same' (31). We attend Communion (22-24), we sing hymns (26) -  yet still the wrong attitudes persist! We 'enjoy' praise, prayer, and  preaching - Remember: God is concerned with the whole of life, not just  the 'spiritual' activities! Christ looked ahead to the Cross - 'the  hour', 'this cup' (35-36). He was far removed from an 'enjoyable  atmosphere' within which prayer is 'easy'. Sorely tempted, He prayed,  'not what I will but what You will' (36). This was no easy road - the  'betrayer' was waiting for Him (42). It was a lonely road - 'they all  forsook Him, and fled' (50). 'The gate is narrow, the way is hard'  (Matthew 7:14). May God help us to follow Jesus. 
22nd July: Exodus 35:1-36:7 
The work of God is shared by many different people with many different gifts. The work is done according to (a) the Lord's command (35:1,4,10; 36:1,5); (b) heartfelt obedience (21; 36:3,5-7); (c) the God-given abilities (24-25; 36:2,4,8). There is something for 'everyone' to do - everyone  'whose heart is stirred whose spirit is moved' (21). Many gifts are  needed (31-35). Underlying them all, there is this: 'filled with the  Spirit of God' (31). In God's work, there is to be 'full' obedience.  When we are fully obedient, there will be 'an overflowing blessing' (Malachi 3:10). 'The people bring much more than enough...'. There 'was sufficient to do all the work, and more'  (36:5,7). God is ready to bless. Are we ready to obey? 'If my  people...I will...'(2 Chronicles 7:14). 'Always abounding in the work of  the Lord' (1 Corinthians 15:58)! 
23rd July: Exodus 36:8-38 
Moses  may have been the leader among God's people, but he could not do all  the work by himself! Two of his helpers - Bezalel and Oholiab - are  named (1-2). Most - 'all the able men' - remain anonymous (8). Anonymous  yet indispensable - Without them, the work of God would have been left  undone! To those who are full of their own importance, God says, 'No-one  is indispensable. I will find someone else to do My work'. To those  who, without fuss, get on with doing His work, God says, 'You are my  servants, through whom My work will make good progress'. Building  Christ's Church is a long process, involving suffering and  disappointments as well as hard-fought victories. In so many ways, the  tabernacle pointed to Christ: 'God with us' (Matthew 1:23). May God help  us to lead many people to Christ! 
24th July: Mark 14:53-15:5 
Jesus  is 'the Christ, the Son of the Blessed'. He is 'seated at the right  hand of Power'. He is 'coming with the clouds of heaven' (61-62). He is  'the King of the Jews': His Kingdom is greater than Herod imagined - it  is 'not of this world' (2; John 18:36). Why, then, did He remain silent  when false charges were brought against Him? He was bearing our sin - That is why 'He did not open His mouth' (Isaiah 53:4-7; 1 Peter  2:22-24; 3:18; 2 Corinthians 5:21). He knew that He was going to the  Cross - for us (John 10:11,15,17-18). Jesus did not deny us: His silence  was a godly silence - 'He bore the sin of many', making 'Himself  an offering for sin' (Isaiah 53:12,10). Will we deny Him? Our silence  is a guilty silence (66-71). May Christ's Word, and His look of  love, cause us to weep - and repent (72; Luke 22:61-62; 2 Corinthians  7:10). 
25th July: Exodus 37:1-29 
Pure gold (2,6,11,16-17,22-24, 26); Jesus Christ is 'pure gold'. He is 'God with  us'. His body was broken for us. We feed on Him, the living Bread. His  light is shining. He spreads the fragrance of His holiness, and the  aroma of His love (Matthew 1:23; Luke 22:19; John 6:35; 8:12; 2  Corinthians 2:14-16). Read about the ark, the mercy seat, the table, the  lampstand, the altar of incense, the holy anointing oil...Think of Christ:  He is the 'mercy seat of pure gold' (6). 'The Lord is merciful and  gracious...': In mercy, He withholds His judgment from us - He is 'slow  to anger'. In grace, He pours His blessing on us - He is 'abounding in  steadfast love' (Psalm 103:8). We deserve judgment. We receive  salvation. Why? Christ took our judgment that we might receive His  salvation. This is the Gospel - and it is 'pure gold'! 
26th July: Exodus 38:1-31 
We read, in verse 8, of 'the ministering women...'. See also 35:25-26,29 - 'all women ...all the women... All the men and women...'.  Male and female - We need each other. We are 'one in Christ Jesus'. In  Him, 'there is neither male nor female' (Galatians 3:28). There should  never be a competitive spirit. We are to complement each other. In verse  25, we read of 'the silver from those of the congregation'.  God's work does not depend entirely on those who have been called to be  leaders. Each of us must play our part. There should be no pulling in  different directions. We belong together. We are to work together. Let's  pull together, pooling our resources, pulling our weight. Among God's  people, there is 'gold' - but it must be 'used for the work' (24). Will  you be worth your weight in gold - for God? 
27th July: Mark 15 6-41 
Jesus  did not 'save Himself'. 'He saved others' (31). He sacrificed Himself  for our salvation. His was the sacrifice. Ours is the salvation. He 'put  away sin by the sacrifice of Himself' (Hebrews 9:26). Barabbas was  'released'. Jesus was 'crucified' (15). This is the Gospel - He took my  place, He died for me. He was 'forsaken' by God (34). We are reconciled  to God (2 Corinthians 5:19,21). We rejoice that Christ ignored the  mocking call from 'the chief priests' and 'scribes': 'come down now from  the Cross' (32). He paid the full price of our salvation. For us  now, there is full salvation. His suffering was complete: 'It is  finished' (John 19:30) was not a whimper of defeat. It was the  declaration of victory. All that was needed - He has done for us. Now, He invites us to receive salvation: 'Come; for all is now ready' (Luke 14:17). 
28th July: Exodus 39:1-43 
'As the Lord had commanded...' (1,5,7,21,26,29,31-32,42-43): Obedience to God - this is the most important thing. 'And Moses blessed them' (43): Where there is obedience, there is blessing - there's a  vital connection between the two. In Jesus, we see perfect obedience:  'My food is to do the will of Him who sent me, and to finish His work'  (John 4:34). Jesus was fully obedient to the Father's will: 'He became  obedient unto death, even death on a Cross' (Philippians 2:8). Through  His obedience, there is blessing for us: 'by one Man's obedience many  will be made righteous' (Romans 5:19). We look beyond the Old Testament  priesthood to Christ, the 'High Priest of the good things that have  come' - By 'His own blood', He has secured for us 'an eternal  redemption' (Hebrews 9:11-12). 
29th July: Exodus 40:1-38 
Here, we highlight three lessons: (a) The work of God begins with the Word of God: 'The Lord said to Moses...' (1). Before we can do anything for God, we  must be taught by God. (b) The work of God must proceed in the way of God:  'Thus did Moses; according to all that the Lord commanded him, so he  did' (16). If we are to accomplish anything for God, we must do God's  work in God's way. (c) The work of God must lead to the worship of God:  'The glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle' (34). If we are really  seeking to work for God, we must seek to give Him the glory for all that  is accomplished. Making these our priorities - the Word, way and  worship of God - , we will look for 'the cloud and fire', the presence  and power of God among us: He will be our Guide 'throughout all our  journeys' (38). 
30th July: Mark 15:42-16:20 
Dead  and buried (44-46) - 'The End'? No! There is more. An 'Appendix'? No! A  whole new beginning - For Jesus, for us! He is 'the first fruits (1  Corinthians 15:20,23). The full glory is still to come (1 Corinthians  15:24). He has risen (6). 'At His coming, those who belong to Christ' will be raised - with Him and by Him - to everlasting life (1 Corinthians  15:23). This is the glory of the resurrection. It is not simply a thing  of the past. It is our glorious future - we 'will be raised  imperishable' (1 Corinthians 15:52). There is a Gospel to be preached - the Gospel of salvation (15-16). May God help us to preach the Gospel 'everywhere' - This will involve all of us, not just a few of us! May He give us the joy of seeing Him at  work, confirming the message by the signs that attend it (20). 
31st July: Psalm 10:1-18 
Wickedness  seems to be so prevalent. Many 'renounce the Lord', saying 'There is no  God' (3-4). It seems that the wicked 'prosper at all times', while the  innocent victims of oppression feel that 'God has forgotten' (5-11).  When it appears that God 'has hidden His face', when we feel that He has forgotten us, we must remember this: 'The Lord is King for  ever and ever' (11,16). Do not judge by appearances. Do not trust your  feelings. Everything changes. Nothing remains the same. Everything  changes - except God. He is unchanged, unchanging and unchangeable in  His faithful love for us. We rejoice in this: 'Jesus Christ is the same  yesterday and today and forever' (Hebrews 13:5). Whatever circumstances  and feelings may suggest, never forget this: 'He loved us from the first  of time, He loves us to the last' (Church Hymnary, 293).
1st August: Leviticus 1:1-2:16 
Jesus  Christ, 'the Lamb without blemish', has 'made atonement' for sin  through the shedding of His 'precious blood' (1:3-5; 1 Peter 1:18-19).  This offering of Christ - He 'loved us and gave Himself up for us' - is  'a pleasing odour to the Lord', 'a fragrant offering and sacrifice to  God' (1:9,13,17; Ephesians 5:2). Read of the 'cereal offering' in which  there was to be 'no leaven' (2:11). Think of Christ - 'Our  Passover Lamb has been sacrificed': 'Let us celebrate the festival (the  Lord's Supper)...with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth' (1  Corinthians 5:7-8). May our worship - 'frankincense': an expression of  worship (Matthew 2:11) - be filled with 'the oil of gladness', 'with the  Holy Spirit and with fire' (Psalm 45:7; Luke 3:16). Such worship is  'most holy...to the Lord' (2:3,10). 
2nd August: Leviticus 3:1-4:35 
Christ is the real thing.  Israel's sacrifices are only 'copies of the heavenly things', 'a shadow  of the good things to come' (Hebrews 9:23-24; 10:1,5-10). As you read  of the 'peace offering', rejoice in this: 'we have peace with God  through our Lord Jesus Christ' (Romans 5:1). We look to Christ, and we  say, 'He is our peace' (Ephesians 2:14). Christ is 'our sin offering' -  'offered...to bear the sins of many (4:3; Hebrews 9:28). The 'blood' has  been shed - We have been 'washed...in the blood of the Lamb' (4:5-7;  Revelation 7:14). Christ went 'outside the camp' for us: He 'suffered  outside the gate in order to sanctify the people through His own blood'  (4:12; Hebrews 13:11-12). For Christ, there was suffering. For us, there  is forgiveness - 'he shall be forgiven' (26,31,35). 
3rd August: Luke 1:1-38 
God  was about to do 'a new thing' (Isaiah 43:19). It was centred on Christ,  though John also played his part (31-33,16-17). There were obstacles -  Zechariah and Elizabeth were 'old' (18), and Mary had 'no man' (34).  What were these obstacles to God? - Nothing: 'with God nothing will be  impossible' (37). How are we to respond to God's 'new thing'? - 'let it  be to me according to Your Word' (38). How will God's 'new thing' make  progress among us? - Through the power of the Holy Spirit: 'he will be  filled with the Holy Spirit' (15), 'The Holy Spirit will come upon  you...' (34). 'Holy Spirit, we welcome you...Move among us with holy  fire...Let the breeze of your presence flow...Please accomplish in me  today, some new work of loving grace, I pray; Unreservedly have Your  way...' (Mission Praise, 241). 
4th August: Leviticus 5:1-6:30 
Christ's sacrifice covers every sin. No matter what your sin may be, you can bring it to Him for  forgiveness. 'If any man sins' - Take your sin to Christ: He has 'made  atonement for sin' (5:1,6,10,13-14,16; 6:2,7). 'Blasphemy against the  Holy Spirit' (Mark 3:28-30) does not refer to some specific,  identifiable sin, which lies beyond God's power to forgive. It refers to  your persistent refusal to bring your sins to Jesus Christ for  forgiveness. The Holy Spirit convicts of sin and leads to the Saviour  (John 16:8-9,14). Let Him show you your sin. Let Him lead you to your  Saviour. 'It is a thing most holy' (6:17) - Never forget God's holiness.  Christ's death speaks of both holiness and love. In holiness, God  pronounces His judgment on sin. In love, He provides forgiveness for  sinners. 
5th August: Leviticus 7:1-38 
As we read about the sacrifices, rejoicing in Christ - the perfect Sacrifice for sin - , let us bring our sacrifice of 'thanksgiving'  (12-13,15). 'Let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God'  (Hebrews 13:15). Let it be 'a living sacrifice', the sacrifice of our  lives - this is 'our spiritual worship' (Romans 12:1). God's salvation  is 'to the praise of His glorious grace' (Ephesians 1:6). 'We bring the  sacrifice of praise...we offer up to You the sacrifices of  thanksgiving...the sacrifices of joy'. 'Fill Thou my life, O Lord my  God, In every part with praise...Not for the lip of praise alone nor  e'en the praising heart, I ask, but for a life made up of praise in  every part' (Mission Praise, 722; Church Hymnary, 457). Still 'in the wilderness' (38), let us learn to worship as we travel to 'the promised land'! 
6th August: Luke 1:39-80 
There  are two great 'songs of praise' here (46-55,67-79). God was doing 'a  new thing'. His people were rejoicing in Him. Great things were  happening. Greater things were going to happen. Soon, the Saviour would  be born. The birth of John the Baptist (57-66) - This was great. The  birth of our Saviour - This would be even greater. Mary and Zechariah  felt the touch of God upon their lives, and their hearts were filled  with praise to God: 'When I feel the touch of Your hand upon my life, it  causes me to sing a song that I love You, Lord. So from deep within my  spirit singeth unto Thee, You are my King, You are my God, and I love  You Lord' (Mission Praise, 753). John was 'in the wilderness'. He  'became strong in spirit' (80). May God help us to grow spiritually,  even when life is not very easy! 
7th August: Leviticus 8: 1-36 
'This  is the thing which the Lord has commanded to be done' (5): For us, it  must be 'as the Lord commanded' (4,9,13,17,21,29,36). God calls us to  serve Him (Hebrews 5:4-5). Obedience to God, love for God - These are to  be our priorities (1 Samuel 15:22; 1 Corinthians 13:3). Christ is to be  our 'first love' (Revelation 2:4). Washed, robed, anointed (6-7,12): Our robes washed in the blood of the Lamb, we have this  anointing - 'to preach the Gospel...' (Revelation 7:14; Luke 4:18-19). Ears, hands and feet:  Consecrated by the blood of Christ to hear the Word of the Lord, do the  work of the Lord and walk in the way of the Lord (24), we must pray for  a change of heart - 'O for a heart to praise my God, a heart from sin set free; a heart that always feels Thy blood so freely shed for me' (Church Hymnary, 85). 
8th August: Leviticus 9: 1-10:20 
Aaron had to make atonement for himself and for the people (9:7). Christ did not need to make atonement for Himself - He was 'without sin' (Hebrews 4:15). In Christ, we are 'accepted'. In Him there is blessing, glory and joy (9:22-24; Ephesians 1:6,3; 2 Thessalonians 2:14; 1 Peter 1:8). God has  given us 'holy fire'. Let us not try to do His work with 'unholy fire'  (10:1-2; Acts 2:3-4). To those who seek to live 'as the Lord has  commanded' (9:7; 10:15), God promises to reveal His holiness, nearness and glory (10:3). Do you want to draw near to God, to become 'mature' in Christ? -  Learn 'to distinguish between the holy and the common... the unclean  and the clean...good and evil' (10:10; Hebrews 5:14). God reveals the  glory of His holiness. Let us confess our sins, be forgiven and be obedient. (Isaiah 6:3-8). 
9th August: Luke 2: 1-20 
God  is in control! Jesus was born in Bethlehem. Long before it happened,  God had it planned (1-7; Micah 5:2-3). As we approach Christ's Return,  God still has His plan. He is still in control. The birth of Christ is  not merely an event from the past. It is also a message for the future.  We look back so that we can move forward. We are fearful about many  things. 'What's the world coming to?', we ask. God turns our question on  its head: 'Christ is coming to the world'. From His first  coming, we look on to His second coming - He 'will come to all the  people' (10): 'every eye will see Him' (Revelation 1:7). His Return  invites us to ask another question: 'when the Son of man comes, will He  find faith on earth?' (18:8). For you, is it still 'before Christ'? Let the 'new age' begin: Let Christ be 'born this day' (11) - in your heart! 
10th August: Leviticus 11:1-47 
God  sees only two types of people: 'clean' and 'unclean'. All of us are 'in  Adam' (sinners). Not all are 'in Christ' (saved) (Romans 5:12-21). How  about you? - Are you cleansed, forgiven, born again, saved,  committed (1 John 1:7,9; John 3:7; Acts 16:31; 2 Timothy 1:12)? Or, are  you still in your sins, guilty of neglecting God's great salvation, not  far from - yet still outside of - God's Kingdom, almost persuaded but  still uncommitted (John 8:24; 9:41; Hebrews 2:3; Acts 26:28)? Before the  call to holiness (45), there is the call to salvation. Give your heart to Christ. This is where holiness begins (Mark 7:14-23). Holiness is  not our own achievement - 'God is at work in you' (Phillipians 2:13).  Remember: Our holiness is grounded in His redemption (45). Feed on His  Word - and let holiness grow (Psalm 119:9-11). 
11th August: Leviticus 12:1-13:46 
How can I be made clean (12:8)? - This is the vital question to which the Gospel  gives its emphatic answer. We ask, 'What can wash away my stain?'. The  answer is given, 'Nothing but the blood of Jesus'. We ask, 'Has  atonement been made for my sin' (12:8)?'. The answer is clear: 'Christ  has for sin atonement made'. You can be 'washed in the blood of  the Lamb'. What water cannot do, Christ does for us. The water used in  baptism - 'a little' or 'a lot'! - cannot wash away our sin. It can only  point beyond itself to Christ's Cross, where we hear the Good News:  'There is wonder-working power in the precious blood of the Lamb' (Redemption Hymnal,  333,615,309,288). Confess your sin - 'Unclean, unclean' (13:45). Christ  will change you - beginning with your 'heart' (12:3; Romans 2:28-29). 
12th August: Luke 2:21-52 
Jesus  'fulfilled all righteousness' (Matthew 3:15). His circumcision and  presentation to the Lord was 'according to the law of Moses' (21-24;  Leviticus 12:1-8). Jesus' obedience was always more than mere conformity  to 'the written code'. He was walking 'in the Spirit'. He was filled  with 'the Spirit of the living God' (2 Corinthians 3:3,6). His obedience  came 'from the heart' and His 'praise' came 'not from men but from God'  (Romans 6:17; 2:29). What joy there was for Simeon and Anna! This was  'salvation', 'redemption' (30,38). As you journey through life, don't  'lose Jesus' (43-45). Keep close to Him! If you do 'lose Him', where  will you find Him again? - 'In the temple' (46). Have you lost your way?  Find your way back to 'the sanctuary of God' - and things will start to  fall into place again (Psalm 73:16-17)! 
13th August: Proverbs 4:20-27 
'Let  your eyes look directly forward, and your gaze be straight before you'  (25). Living the Christian life is like 'walking a tightrope' - We must  'not swerve to the right or to the left' (27; Deuteronomy 28:14; Joshua  1:7; 23:6). Looking straight ahead, 'let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the  author and perfecter of our faith...'(Hebrews 12:2). In the face of  life's many difficulties, you may ask, "Can I 'run with perseverance the  race marked out for me' (Hebrews 12:1)?". Keep your eyes on your own  capacity for perseverance - and you will be filled with thoughts of your  own weakness. Keep your eyes on Christ and His preserving power (1  Peter 1:5; John 10:27-29; Philippians 1:6; Romans 8:37-39). You will  grow strong - strengthened by Christ's Word: 'My grace is sufficient for  you' (2 Corinthians 12:9). 
14th August: Leviticus 13:47-14:32 
We read about skin disease. Remember: there is also the sin disease - and we're all suffering from that!. Sin is a deadly 'cancer'  for which there is only one treatment: 'Oh, precious is the flow that  makes me white as snow; no other fount I know, nothing but the blood of  Jesus' (Redemption Hymnal, 333). The new birth - like physical  birth - is a unique, once-for-all, experience: it is the beginning of  the Christian life (John 3:3-6). Many times over, we will need to be  'washed a second time' (58). Justification (Romans 5:1) happens in a moment: 'The vilest offender who truly believes, that moment a pardon receives'. Sanctification (Romans 6:13,19). lasts a lifetime: 'Take time to be holy...(Mission Praise, 708,625). God loves us: He will help us to 'be holy' (1 Peter 1:16). 
15th August: Leviticus 14:33-15:33 
You  can get 'dry rot' in people - as well as houses (14:34; Hebrews 12:15)!  Sin is like 'a wasting disease' (Psalm 106:13-15). It will only get  worse - unless something is done about it! Sin spreads. and spreads,  and... Can anything be done about this sad situation? Look into  yourself, and you will find that the situation is hopeless (Romans  7:14-20). Look to Christ, and there is hope: 'where sin increased, grace  abounded all the more' (Romans 5:20). Sin is not to be taken lightly.  Don't underestimate the power of sin. Little by little, it will lure you  away from Christ. Keep close to Jesus, rejoicing in this: 'He who is in  you is greater than he who is in the world' (1 John 4:4). God calls for  holiness: 'your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit'; 'present your  bodies...to God' (1 Corinthians 6:19; Romans 12:1). 
16th August: Luke 3:1-38 
John's  message came from 'God' (2). He did not begin with love. He preached  about sin and divine judgment, warning his hearers to 'flee from the  wrath to come' (7). He called for 'repentance' (3,8). This was not what  people wanted to hear. Before we can rejoice in the Good News concerning  salvation, we must recognize our sin and our need of salvation. John  prepared the way for Jesus. 'All have sinned', 'The wages of sin is  death' - This is the 'bad news' which prepares us to receive, with  joyful thanksgiving, 'the Good News': 'the free gift of God is eternal  life in Christ Jesus our Lord' (Romans 3:23; 6:23). Like John, we are to  point to Jesus, God's 'beloved Son' : Before 'Adam' was, He is. Pray that the 'Holy Spirit' will bring people to Christ (22,38; 8:58). 
17th August: Leviticus 16:1-34 
God is 'holy':  We cannot 'draw near' and 'come' to Him without a 'sin offering' (1-3).  We cannot bring 'a sin offering' to Him. We can only bring our sin: Our  righteousness is 'like filthy rags' (Isaiah 64:6). There is a 'way' for  sinners to 'draw near' to God: Christ is the true and living Way (John  14:6; Hebrews 10:19-22). In verses 20-22, we have a great picture of  Christ bearing the sin of the world: 'Bearing shame and scoffing rude,  in my place condemned He stood...Full atonement, - Yes it is! Hallelujah! What a Saviour!' (Church Hymnary, 380). Atonement has been made for us...We have been cleansed from all our sins (30): What a perfect atonement! What a  perfect Saviour! - 'God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of  our Lord Jesus Christ' (Galatians 6:14). 
18th August: Leviticus 17:1-18:23 
We  are to be devoted 'to the Lord' (17:4-6,9): 'You are not your own; you  were bought with a price' (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). Underlying Christ's  atoning death, there is this principle: 'the life...is in the blood...I  have given it for you...to make atonement...' (17:11). Christ has shed  His blood: He has given His life that we might have life. God looks upon  His Son, crucified for us: He 'has commanded the blessing, life for  evermore' (Psalm 133:3). We confess our sin, acknowledging that 'without  the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins' (Hebrews 9:22).  With grateful thanksgiving, we rejoice in our Saviour, 'the Lamb of God,  who takes away the sin of the world' (John 1:29). 'Dear dying Lamb, Thy  precious blood shall never lose its power...' (Mission Praise, 671). 
19th August: Luke 4:1-30 
Jesus  was 'tempted by the devil' (2). He was rejected by His enemies (28-29).  When we look around us, we see nothing but temptations and rejection -  What a negative way of looking at things! There is something more  positive here - the presence of the Holy Spirit (1,14,18). Do not be  afraid. There is no need to be discouraged. We need not be defeated. The  temptations may be many. The opposition may be fierce. We can 'pass  through the midst of them' (30): 'God did not give us a spirit of  timidity but a spirit of power and love and self-control' (2 Timothy  1:7). Satan is persistent - They did not rest until they had crucified  Him. Faced with such opposition, we - like Jesus - must walk in the  Spirit (Ephesians 6:12,17-18). 
20th August: Leviticus 18:24-19:37 
Holiness  and love - the two belong together (1,18,34). God calls us to live a  life of holiness, a life of love. Through His Spirit - the Holy Spirit,  the Spirit of love - , He enables us to live this life. We need His  promises. We need His commands. Take them both together - not one  without the other! Promises without commands - We take God for granted,  we presume on His blessing. Commands without promises - Our 'obedience'  becomes a legalistic thing which has nothing to do with the Gospel of  grace. We are to 'be holy...before Him in love' (Ephesians  1:4). 'The holiness without which no one will see the Lord' (Hebrews  12:14) is to be accompanied by the 'love' without which we are 'nothing'  (1 Corinthians 13:1-3). The Lord has redeemed us: By His grace, we  shall 'be holy...in love' (34,36). 
21st August: Leviticus 20:1-27 
The  life of holiness is not an expression of our own moral virtue. It is an  expression of the holy character of God being reproduced in us: 'I am  the Lord who sanctify you' (8). God wants us for Himself - This is why  we must not live the world's way: 'I the Lord am holy, and have  separated you from the peoples, that you should be mine' (26). God has a  great purpose for us: 'You shall inherit their land...I will give it to  you, a land flowing with milk and honey' (24). 'You prepare a table  before me in the presence of my enemies...my cup overflows' (Psalm  23:5). 'The grace of our Lord was poured out on me abundantly...in  Christ Jesus' (1 Timothy 1:14). This is the pathway to holiness: 'By  grace you have been saved through faith...for good works' (Ephesians  2:8-10). 
22nd August: Luke 4:31-5:11 
'His  Word was with power' (32). Where there are hindrances, obstructing the  flow of God's Word, we must pray that God's Word will be heard for 'what  it really is' - 'not the word of men but the Word of God' (1  Thessalonians 2:13). Our hearing of God's Word is not to be a  superficial thing - Here, the people of Capernaum 'tried to keep Him  from leaving them' (42). Later, Jesus said, 'You, Capernaum...shall be  thrust down to hell' (10:15). We must hear the Word of God and act on it  (1,3). We may feel, 'it's a waste of time'. We must be obedient to God:  'at Your Word I will let down the nets' (5). We are to be 'partners' in  the Lord's work (7): 'workers together with God' (2 Corinthians 6:1).  All the glory belongs to the Lord: We are 'sinful' - Through His grace,  we can win others for Him (8,10). 
23rd August: Leviticus 21:1-22:16 
We  are sanctified by the Lord (21:8,15,23; 22:9,16). It is His doing -  God's call to holiness is founded in His gift of holiness: 'the Holy  Spirit...has been given to us' (Romans 5:5) - 'every virtue we  possess...every victory won...every thought of holiness, are His alone' (Church Hymnary,  336). When we are so conscious of our own weakness, God says, 'I am the  Lord' (21:12; 22:2-3,8). He is more than sufficient for our  justification, sanctification and glorification. Between our  justification (the forgiveness of our sins) and our glorification  (heaven) there is our sanctification ('conformed to the image of His  Son'). This is God's doing. From beginning to end, it is the work of God  (Romans 8:28-29). We lack faith, we lack holiness, we lack  perseverance: In this we rejoice - 'Salvation is of the Lord' (Jonah  2:9). 
24th August: Leviticus 22:17-23:44 
God says, 'I am the Lord' (22:30-33): Let Him be 'your God' (23:14,22,28,40,43,). We are to 'worship in Spirit and in truth' -  'in the Spirit on the Lord's Day' (John 4:24; Revelation 1:10) When  Christ died - This was the day of atonement. We worship Him, 'our  Passover Lamb' (22:28; Exodus 12:13; 1 Corinthians 5:7-8). After 'fifty  days' came the Day of Pentecost - What a day that was (Acts  2:4,16-21,41)! Bring 'the first fruits of your harvest' (9): 'What can I  give Him? - my heart' (Church Hymnary, 178). Blow the  trumpet (23:23; Joel 2:1,15) - It must be a 'clear call': 'Get ready for  battle' (1 Corinthians 14:8). On the 'day of worship' (3), God is  preparing us for the rest of the week: 'Be strong in the Lord' (Ephesians 6:12). Pray for the 'fire' of God (8,18,25,27,36-37; Acts 2:3-4). 
25th August: Luke 5:12-32 
'You can make me clean...I will;  be clean' (12-13). Look at Christ's death for you - Can you doubt His  desire to save you? Look at His resurrection - Can you doubt His power  to save you? The Lord 'desires all people to be saved' (1 Timothy 2:4).  We are saved through 'the Gospel' which 'is the power of God for  salvation to everyone who has faith' (Romans 1:16). Jesus can save.  Jesus will save. 'The power of the Lord' (17) is available to all:  'Whoever wishes' may 'come' and receive 'the free gift' of salvation  (Revelation 22:17). To each one, Jesus says, 'Follow Me' (27). We must  not think of ourselves as 'righteous'. Each one must come as a 'sinner'  to Jesus, the Saviour of sinners (32). Through prayer, the Lord's saving  power can be released among us (16-17; John 14:13-14; 1 John 5:14-15). 
26th August: Leviticus 24:1-25:24 
'Pure' worship is to be offered 'continually': This is what God is looking for (1-8). 'Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord? Who shall stand in His holy place?': No-one else but Christ - He alone 'has  clean hands and a pure heart', He alone 'will receive blessing from the  Lord' (Psalm 24:3-5). Our worship is offered to God - in Christ...to  the praise of His glorious grace' (Ephesians 1:3,6). This is our  worship, this is our joy - We have been reconciled to God 'through our  Lord Jesus Christ' (Romans 5:11). The 'jubilee' - 'fiftieth year'  (25:11): Half a century is such a short time in the light of eternity  (James 4:14). God has been good to us. How have we lived? How much do we  love God? How much have we loved one another? Rededicate yourself to  'the Lord your God' (25:17). 
27th August: Leviticus 25:25-55 
Moral conduct is to be grounded in divine redemption.  Throughout the detailed ethical instructions, there is the recurrent  emphasis on God's salvation: 'I am the Lord your God, who brought you  forth out of the land of Egypt (Salvation) to give you the land of  Canaan, and to be your God (Sanctification)...For to Me the people of  Israel are servants (Service) whom I have brought forth out of the land  of Egypt: I am the Lord your God' (38,55). Salvation; Sanctification; Service.  We do not begin with the questions, 'How can I live a godly life? How  can I serve the Lord?' We begin with the question, 'What must I do to be  saved?'. God's answer is clear: 'Believe in the Lord Jesus ...` (Acts  16:31). 
28th August: Luke 5:33-6:16 
There  is such a difference between the 'old' legalism and the 'new' life in  the Spirit (36-39; Romans 8:2-4). The question, asked in verse 2,  springs from the dead hardness of strict legalistic religion. Christ is Lord (5) - not the 'Pharisees'. They try to control people's lives.  With their kill-joy attitude, they only succeed in making everybody  miserable - like themselves! The 'old' needs to be 'crucified', so that  the 'new' can be born in us (Romans 6:6; 2 Corinthians 5:17). Some say,  'I don't need to be born again'. Jesus disagrees (John 3:3). Disciples, Apostles (13): We learn everything from Jesus - nothing from the 'Pharisees'! We  are sent out by Christ for Christ - not by the Pharisees to spread  Pharisaiam! God is interested in names (14-16): 'rejoice that your names  are written in heaven' (10:21). 
29th August: Leviticus 26:1-46 
'Every spiritual blessing' is 'in Christ' (Ephesians 1:3). The moment you begin to feel superior - 'I am blessed because I am obedient' (There is too much of 'I' in this!) - , remember: 'in Christ'. We are blessed because God loves us and Christ died for us. It is His grace which changes us. Without Him we can do nothing (John 15:5). Our obedience comes from Him.  Our disobedience comes from ourselves. We do not deserve His blessing.  We deserve His judgment. There is only one way to blessing: Humbly  confess your sin, turning to the Lord in whom alone there is blessing.  We must not 'be proud' of our 'obedience'. There is only one thing about  which we should 'boast': 'the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ'  (Galatians 6:14). Thank God for His 'new covenant' (42,44-45; Hebrews  8:8-13; 1 Corinthians 11:25). 
30th August: Leviticus 27:1-34 
'Every  devoted thing is most holy to the Lord' (28). We are loved by the holy  God. We are precious in His eyes. In love, He has reached out to us -  through the Cross of Christ (Romans 5:8). We are 'greatly beloved'  (Daniel 9:23). The Lord takes great joy in every sinner who returns to  Him (Luke 15:7,10). 'Most holy to the Lord' - This is how the holy God  looks upon those who have 'faith in Jesus' (Romans 3:26). We are to be  'devoted' to the Lord: The Lord must come first - 'All the tithe...is  the Lord's' (30). The bringing of the tithe (tenth) to God was an  outward sign of an inward commitment. Do you love God? - Let it show in  your living and giving. Let it be Thanksgiving (I want to) - not Grudge  Giving (I have to) or Duty Giving (I ought to): 'God loves a cheerful  giver' (2 Corinthians 9:7). 
31st August: Psalms 11:1-13:6 
'The  Lord is in His holy temple, the Lord's throne is in heaven': We 'take  refuge' in Him (11:4,1). We are to seek His face, confident that 'when  He appears...we shall see Him as He is' (11:7; 27:8; 1 John 3:2).  Seeking God's face, we learn to rest in His promises, we are protected,  we are kept (12:6-7). We may face difficult circumstances (13:1-4). We  can still trust in the Lord's 'steadfast love'. We can still 'rejoice'  in His 'salvation'. We can still say with the Psalmist, 'I will sing to  the Lord, because He has dealt bountifully with me' - 'God is able to  make all grace abound to you, so that in all things at all times, having  all that you need, you will abound in every good work (13:5-6; 2  Corinthians 9:8).
1st September: Numbers 1:1-54 
'Every  man able to go forth to war': This is the key phrase in verses 1-46.  God is looking for 'soldiers': Soldiers of Christ! To live for Christ is  to be engaged in warfare. It is spiritual warfare. We need 'the whole  armour of God' (Ephesians 6:10-20). We must remember that 'the weapons  of our warfare are not worldly'. They have 'divine power'. They are  'powerful weapons from God'. They are 'mighty through God' (2  Corinthians 10:3-6). The Levites were to lead worship (47-54). The  battle is the Lord's (2 Chronicles 20:15). We will never be strong  'soldiers of Christ' unless we are learning to worship the Lord. Worship  lies at the very heart of the life of God's people. Without worship, we  are weak. Worshipping God, we will grow 'strong'. We will 'firmly  resist' the enemy. We will 'take action' for God (Daniel 11:32). 
2nd September: Numbers 2:1-34 
'The  Lord said to Moses': These words appear more than eighty times in  Numbers. Let your life be centred on the Word of the Lord - Listen,  Read, Study, Memorize, Meditate! God's people were 'facing the tent of  meeting on every side' (2). There were to be no gaps in the ranks. We  are not to pull in different directions. We are to pull together.  Everyone has their place. All who are willing to serve the Lord will  find a place in His service. Let us be united in worship and witness.  Without this spirit of co-operation, the work of the Lord will fail.  Each of us needs to be 'in position' (17) - on the Lord's Day for  worship and on other occasions, when we are called upon to 'serve the  Lord with gladness' (Psalm 100:2). Let our 'standard' (17,31) be the  Lord - not the world: We are God's people! 
3rd September: Luke 6:17-49 
Four thoughts from Jesus' 'sermon': (a) Hunger for God (21; Matthew 5:6): Laziness leads to superficial Christianity. Do not  hunger and you will not be 'filled with the Spirit' (Ephesians 5:18). Do  not seek and you will not find (Matthew 7:7). Seek the Lord with all your heart (Jeremiah 29:13). God has so much for us (1 Corinthians 2:12). Don't miss out (2 Corinthians 9:6). (b) Love for God: Love is the greatest thing in the world. Our love for God is to be seen in our love for others (27; 1 John 3:16-17). (c) Vision of God:  The blind cannot lead the blind (39-42). Make sure you are not 'blind  and short-sighted' (2 Peter 1:9). Run with the vision - Others will be  blessed (Habakkuk 2:2). (d) Foundations in God: Make sure you are 'rooted' in Christ, our sure 'Foundation' (43-49; Ephesians 3:17; 2:19-22). 
4th September: Luke 7:1-35 
'When  he heard of Jesus...' (3): 'Faith comes from hearing...'. Tell people  of Jesus: 'How can they believe in Him if they have not heard His  message? How can they hear if no one tells the Good News?' (Romans  10:17,14). 'God has visited His people!' (16): 'Raised from the dead' -  Pray for a real 'quickening' as the 'God, who is rich in mercy', pours  out 'His great love' upon us (Ephesians 2:4-6). John was looking for the  One who was 'to come' (19). What a great thing it is when Christ comes  among us. Do we take His presence for granted? Do not presume on God's  blessing: 'Blessed are the eyes which see what you see!...many...desired  to see what you see and did not see it, and to hear what you hear, and  did not hear it' (10:23-24). Do we care about God's blessing? - If we  don't, we may lose it! 
5th September: Numbers 3:1-51 
The  Levites were to 'minister at the tabernacle' (5-8). Different people  were given different responsibilities. They were not to compete with  each other. There was to be no overlapping. One was not to interfere  with the work of another. The call comes from God. 'Every male from a  month old and upward' (15,24,28,34,39-40,43): Long before we even  thought of serving God, He was calling us to be His servants. God is in  control: He determines who will serve Him, and how we will serve Him. Each of us has a part to play. The important thing is the whole work of God. Let each of us be faithful so that the whole work can move  forward. Never forget this: We serve the Lord as a 'redeemed' people,  for whom Christ has provided 'redemption' - 'we have redemption through  His blood' (44-51; Ephesians 1:7). 
6th September: Numbers 4:1-49 
'The  sons...from thirty years old up to fifty years old'  (2-3,22-23,29-30...): The service of the Lord calls for maturity. Long  before we ever offered ourselves to God, He had His hand upon us. If,  however, we are to prove worthy servants of the Lord, we must press on  to spiritual maturity. Why is it that so many people upon whom God's  hand has been laid early in life never attain their true spiritual  status? - They have been distracted. 'Self' has intruded where only God  should be. Choose God-centred blessing - not self-centred rebellion. God  is 'holy' (Isaiah 6:3; Revelation 4:8). Serving Him is a 'holy' calling  (4,15,19-20). In all of our service, one thing must take priority: Worship. We can 'put on a performance'. It can be very impressive. Without real worship, it means nothing! 
7th September: Luke 7:36-8:21 
Jesus  does not come to us because we are good. He comes to us because He  forgives sins. The woman came to Jesus and received forgiveness. The  Pharisee, though steeped in religion, remained unforgiven (47-50). Don't  be like the Pharisee. Don't look down your nose at the ordinary people  who mean so much to the Lord. 'Some women...': Much of God's work  is being upheld by faithful women who, by their praying, giving and  working, are 'ministering to Him' (1-3). We read Jesus' parables (4-18),  and we learn. Let us read 'the book of everyday life', and learn what  the Lord is saying to us concerning Himself. Let us learn from everyday  life, always with this goal: Hearing the Word of God and doing it (21). 
8th September: Numbers 5:1-31 
'The  Lord said...' (1): Let us hear and obey His Word. God is holy: His  people are not to be defiled (3). Sin is not merely moral. It is  spiritual. It is not only a deviation from law. It is an offence against  God - 'breaking faith with the Lord' (6). God is holy: 'Atonement' is  more than a provision for our need of forgiveness. It is a  'restitution...to the Lord' (8). Christ's atoning death does two things:  (a) It meets the demands of God's holiness. (b) It meets our need of  salvation. We must not do 'the wrong' and 'break faith with the Lord'  (6-7). We are to obey the Gospel call for 'faith in our Lord Jesus  Christ': This is 'repentance'. We obey God's 'command...to repent' (Acts  20:21; 17:30). No longer 'trusting in ourselves that we are righteous',  we confess our sins and look to Christ for mercy (Luke 18:9,13). 
9th September: Numbers 6:1-27 
'Separate...to  the Lord,...Separate...from wine and strong drink' (2-3): These two  thoughts are closely connected in the New Testament - 'Do not get drunk  with wine,...Be filled with the Spirit' (Ephesians 5:18). We are to be  'holy to the Lord' (8). 'Consecrated to the Lord', our whole life must  be controlled by one thing: 'Do all to the glory of God' (1 Corinthians  10:31). Motivated by a desire for God's glory, we will enjoy God's  blessing (22-27). God's blessing is not a 'cheap' thing, something that  doesn't matter very much. Remember Esau (Genesis 25:29-34). He couldn't  be bothered. He couldn't care less. God's blessing meant nothing to him.  He didn't want God's blessing. What did God do? - He gave it to Jacob.  'The Lord bless you...': Do you want this? Or must God find somebody  else? 
10th September: Luke 8:22-56 
'Where  is your faith?' (25). The Lord is not looking for lip-service. He is  looking for real faith. Some beg Jesus 'to depart from them' (37). They  don't want to know!Others long to 'be with Him' (38). They don't want to  go! Some have no interest in worship. They don't really want to get to  know Jesus. Others love to 'worship', but they are so slow to witness.  They need to hear Jesus' words - 'Return to your home, and declare how  much God has done for you' (39). Real faith worships. Real faith  witnesses. We need both - Worship and Witness. Some - 'the multitudes'  (45) - touch Jesus superficially. They are interested - when everything  seems exciting! They touch Jesus religiously. They do not touch Him by  faith. Where is the 'power', the resurrection power (46,54)? Without  faith, there is no power! 
11th September: Luke 9:1-27 
It was a short mission (1-6) - short but important! They were being trained for future work. There and then,  people were hearing the Gospel, believing in Christ and being saved.  There was opposition (7-9): There's always plenty of that - 'We are more  than conquerors through Him who loved us' (Romans 8:37). There is  physical need. There is also spiritual need - 'Do not labour for the  food which perishes, but for the food which endures to eternal life'  (10-17; John 6:27). In verses 18-27, we learn (a) Who Jesus is: 'the Christ of God' (20). (b) What Jesus has done for us: His death and resurrection (22). (c) What Jesus calls us to be:  His followers (23). May God give us grace to follow 'the Son of God who  loved us and gave Himself for us' (Galatians 2:20). We follow Christ,  looking for 'the Kingdom of God' (27). 
12th September: Numbers 7:1-47 
Why do we bring our offerings to the Lord? - 'that they may be used in  doing the service of the tent of meeting' (5). We give ourselves to the  Lord - 'Love so amazing, so divine, Shall have my soul, my life,  my all' - and we ask Him to put our gift to good use - 'O use me, Lord,  use even me, just as Thou wilt, and when, and where' (Church Hymnary,  437,485). Why is there so much repetition here? - God does not look  only at the total offering. He prizes each separate offering. Each gift  expresses the giver's love for Him. Let us 'lay up...treasures in  heaven', bringing our offerings in faith, as an expression of our  gratitude to God for His abundant grace. Which matters most to you? -  'earth' or 'heaven': 'Where your treasure is, there will your heart be  also' (Matthew 6:19-21). 
13th September: Numbers 7:48-89 
At the end of this long chapter, we have Communion with God:  'When Moses went into the tent of the meeting to speak with the Lord,  he heard the voice speaking to him from above the mercy seat...' (89).  This is what it's all about: We 'draw near to the throne of grace'. We  'receive mercy and find grace...' (Hebrews 4:16). Listen for God's Word.  Speak to God in prayer. So often, the most important things get crowded  out. We lose sight of God - His love, His grace, His mercy. Religion  becomes a burdensome, legalistic thing. There is no joy in it. God comes  to us in mercy - ready to forgive. In love, He offers us a new  beginning. By His grace, we can live as the people of God. God is  speaking. Are you listening to Him? God is listening. Are you speaking  to Him? Nothing is more important than this! 
14th September: Luke 9:28-62 
The  'glory' of Christ (32) - 'Before the world was made', He shared the  Father's glory. Through the Cross - 'His departure...'(31) - , Christ,  'the Lamb that was slain' for sinners, has fulfilled God's eternal  purpose of salvation (John 17:4-5; Revelation 13:8). We are to 'look' to  the Lamb of God. We are to 'listen'' to God's beloved Son. If we do not  look and listen, we will not learn. To those who refuse to look, listen  and learn, God issues His Word of warning: 'See that you do not refuse  Him who is speaking' (Hebrews 12:25). We must confess our spiritual  poverty, our lack of power (37-42), understanding (43-45), humility  (46-48), unity (49-50) and love (51-56). Looking to Christ who 'set His  face to go to Jerusalem' and refusing to 'look back', we must choose to  be 'good soldiers of Jesus Christ' (51,62: 2 Timothy 2:3-4). 
15th September: Numbers 8: 1-26 
The  Levites were 'set apart' for God (14). They were 'a gift to Aaron...to  do the service for the people of Israel at the tent of meeting...' (19).  We are to work together as a team. 'Yield yourselves to God...' (Romans  6:13): Help each other to be better servants of Christ. The 'lampstand'  (1-4): 'Thy Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path' (Psalm  119:105). Without Christ, the living Word, we remain in darkness. With  Him we 'walk in the light', in the joy of His salvation (John 8:12; 1  John 1:7). 'Service for the people of Israel' (19): As servants of  Christ - He 'came not to be served but to serve' (Mark 10:45) - , we are  to serve others for 'Jesus' sake' (2 Corinthians 4:5). To those whom we  serve, we say, 'We are your servants but you are not our lords'. Jesus  is Lord: It is 'as the Lord commands' (22). 
16th September: Numbers 9:1-23 
God's  people were 'in the wilderness' (1) - No longer in the land of bondage,  not yet in the land of promise. This is our situation - We look back to  what the Lord has done for us, we look forward to what the Lord will  yet do for us. The Passover directs our attention to the death of  Christ, 'our Passover Lamb' (4; 1 Corinthians 5:7). The Cloud directs us  to the return of Christ - 'He is coming with the clouds' (Revelation  1:7; Matthew 24:30). God's people are guided by the 'cloud' and 'fire'  (15): Not one without the other, but both together. We need both grace  and faith: Not grace without faith, not faith without grace. God is  'able to keep us from falling' (Jude 24) - This is grace. We are to keep  ourselves in the love of God (Jude 21) - This is faith. 'Kept by the  power of God through faith' (1 Peter 1:5). 
17th September: Luke 10:1-37 
Christ's  message - 'The kingdom of God has come near to you' (9) - calls for our  response - hearing with faith or rejecting in unbelief (16). Where does  this response of faith come from? - From God: He reveals Himself to us  (21). Questions: Why do we ask them? - 'to put Jesus to the test'  (25), 'to justify ourselves' (29)? You cannot come to Christ until you  stop trying to justify yourself - Are you trying to test Him or learning  to trust Him? (a) What shall I do to inherit eternal life?' (25): The law cannot save. It can only show us our need of the One who does save - Jesus (Romans 8:3-4). (b) 'Who is my neighbour?'  (29): 'Passing by on the other side' (31-32) - This is not love. It's  nothing like the love of God for 'sinners' (Romans 5:8). Jesus loves  you. Let Him save you. Let His love change you. 
18th September: Proverbs 5:1-14 
Being married:  There are many temptations - the 'loose woman' (3-6). Be positive:  Through 'mutual love and respect', let's build 'strong and happy'  marriages, in which 'the marriage bond is honoured'. Singles:  Don't spoil everything by getting entangled with those who are 'loose'  in their commitment to believing in and living for Jesus Christ! Bringing up children:  There are many problems - the natural reaction of the child (11-12).  Our children are to be brought up 'in the nurture and admonition of the  Lord' (Ephesians 6:4). We need the tenderness - 'I don't condemn you' -  and firmness - 'don't sin' - of Christ (John 8:11). Children: The  natural reaction - 'I hate discipline. I will not listen' - is the  sinful reaction. Pray for God's help - to 'obey your parents in the  Lord' (Ephesians 6:1-3). 
19th September: Numbers 10:1-36 
God's  Word - 'the testimony' (11) - reveals God's purpose (29) and provides  God's guidance (33). The 'cloud' is like the presence of God's Spirit  hovering over us. Great things are about to happen. The Spirit of God is  moving over the face of the people of God gathered for worship (11;  Genesis 1:2). Through the Word, the Spirit draws our attention to the  Lord who has promised good to us (29). Instructed by the Word and  strengthened by the Spirit, we 'journey' with God (33). We are moving on  with God, looking forward to the fulfilment of His good purpose. We  have heard the trumpet sound, calling us to worship the Lord, to be His  soldiers and servants (1-10). We hear the divine declaration, 'I am the  Lord your God' (10), and we say, 'Yes, Lord, You are our God' (Psalm  63:1; John 20:28). 
20th September: Numbers 11:1-35 
'The  people complained in the hearing of the Lord' (1) - Remember: All our  words are spoken 'in the hearing of the Lord'! There was 'a rabble among  them' (4): What problems there are when such people are mingling with  God's people! What are we to do when this happens? - Pray for God's help  (10-15). God will not disappoint us - He gives people who will 'take their stand with us' (16), the Spirit who rests on God's people (25), the Word, 'strong meat' to sustain our spiritual strength (31-32; Hebrews 5:12-14). The lure of the world , the pull of the flesh - 'the rabble' wanted to go back to 'Egypt' (4-6): This is the attack of the devil.  Standing in Christ's strength alone, we 'resist the devil'. Defeated by  Christ, Satan can do nothing but 'flee from us' (Philippians 4:13;  James 4:7; 1 John 3:8). 
21st September: Luke 10:38-11:28 
Mary  was 'listening to the Lord' (39). Martha was 'distracted' (40). 'One  thing is needful' (42): Don't let anything distract you from this -  Getting alone with God. More than anything else, Jesus wants to 'teach  us to pray' (1). The greatest gift that God gives - in answer to prayer -  is the Holy Spirit (13). We are to 'pray at all times in the Spirit',  relying completely on the Spirit to teach us to pray (Ephesians 6:18).  Pray that you will be 'filled with the Holy Spirit' (Acts 4:31). As you  pray, let the Spirit be your Helper (Romans 8:26). 'Some' are so  critical: Negative thinkers, they 'point the finger' at everything (15).  'Others' are never satisfied: They've made complaining a way of life  (16). Let's rise above all this: 'Blessed...are those who hear the Word  of God and keep it!' (28). 
22nd September: Numbers 12:1-13:33 
Miriam  and Aaron complained (12:1-2). Caleb and Joshua encouraged (30;  14:6-9). Thank God for encouragers! How did Moses react to criticism? He  'was very meek' (3). He was like Jesus - 'When He was reviled, He did  not revile again' (1 Peter 2:23). Moses - 'a servant' - was 'entrusted  with all God's House': We look beyond Moses to Christ who is 'faithful  over God's House as the Son' (12:7; Hebrews 3:5-6). In times of  difficulty, we draw our strength from Him. Where there is the  encouragement of faith, the discouraging voice of unbelief is not far  behind it. Unbelief sees nothing but problems - 'We are not able...'  (30-31). 'Not able' or 'well able'? The choice is yours. Choose faith.  There must be no place for unbelief. 
23rd September: Numbers 14:1-45 
'All the congregation raised a loud cry...', 'all the people of Israel murmured...', 'all the congregation said to stone them...' (1-2,10). Was there any 'light  at the end of the tunnel'? Yes! - 'The Lord... will bring us into this  land' (8). With the promise, there was also the warning: 'Do not rebel  against the Lord' (9). Though angry, God remained patient: 'How long will this people despise Me? How long will they not believe in Me?' (11). He was waiting patiently for a  change of heart. Moses prayed for mercy without presuming on it: 'He  will by no means clear the guilty' (18-19). God announces His pardon  (20). Nevertheless, there may be times when God says, 'Enough is enough -  It's time for a new beginning': Only Caleb, Joshua and the 'little  ones' would enter the land (30-31): No one else! Not even Moses! 
24th September: Luke 11: 29-54 
Christ  is 'greater than Jonah' (32). Jonah was preserved alive (Jonah  1:17-2:10). Christ 'died...was buried' and 'was raised' (1 Corinthians  15:3-4). Through His resurrection, He has been 'declared with power to  be the Son of God' (Romans 1:4). We are not to be secret disciples (33):  Believe in your heart that God raised Jesus from the dead and confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord (Romans 10:9). Guard against 'the lust of the eyes'  (34; 1 John 2:16; Genesis 3:6; 13:10-11; 19:26; Joshua 7:20-21; 2 Samuel  11:2-5). The Pharisees were 'fools' (40). Clean on the outside but not  in their hearts, they 'loved the best seat in the synagogues' but they  were spiritually dead - 'like graves' (39,43-44). Their true nature is  seen in their reaction to Christ (53-54): Don't be a 'fool'! Don't be a  'Pharisee'! 
25th September: Luke 12:1-34 
'Do  not fear...' (4): 'If God is for us, who can be against us?' (Romans  8:31). Acknowledge Christ or deny Him (8-9): Let your choice be clear -  'Christ means everything to me' (Philippians 1:21). Do you want to  confess Christ? - Here's a great promise for you: 'the Holy Spirit will  teach you in that very hour what you ought to say' (12). In our  generation, there is a 'gold rush'. Many are preoccupied with 'having a  lot of material possessions' (15). What does God say about this? -  'Fool!' (20). We hear it said, 'He's too heavenly-minded to be any  earthly good'. You can be 'too earthly-minded to be any heavenly good'!  It is better to be 'spiritually minded' than 'carnally minded' (Romans  8:6). 'Seek His Kingdom...it is your Father's good pleasure to give you  the Kingdom' (31-32). 
26th September : Numbers 15:1-41 
We  read of offerings for 'atonement' (25,28). We think of Christ: He went  'outside the camp' for us (35-36; Hebrews 13:12) - to bring us  forgiveness (25,28). We are to 'be holy to our God', the God of our  redemption (40-41). Obedience to God is of the utmost importance:We need  to be reminded of all His commandments (39). Our supreme motivation is  redeeming love. This divine redemption creates a relationship. God is  our God and we are His people. Out of this relationship is to come the  obedience of faith (40-41). 'E'er since, by faith, I saw the stream Thy  flowing wounds supply, Redeeming love has been my theme, and shall be  till I die'; 'When He comes, our glorious King, all His ransomed home to  bring, then anew this song we'll sing, "Hallelujah! What a Saviour!"' (Mission Praise, 671; Church Hymnary, 380). 
27th September: Numbers 16:1-50 
'You  have gone too far!': They regarded themselves as 'holy', yet they  refused to go 'too far' with God (3)! What kind of 'holiness' is this?  There is a 'holiness' which is more concerned with respectability than  obedience to God. Faced with 'the upward call of God in Christ Jesus',  we dare not say, 'We will not come up' (12; Philippians 3:14). We are to  be 'holy': 'Let everyone who names the name of the Lord depart from  iniquity' (4; 2 Timothy 2:19). 'Separate yourselves' (20): This is not  the false separation of the Pharisees - Spiritual 'pride' is 'an  abomination to the Lord' (Proverbs 11:1-2). Maintain your high calling - Don't get dragged down to the level of those who 'will not come up'  to where God wants them to be - and remember: 'By grace ...not your own  doing...the gift of God' (Ephesians 2:8). 
28th September: Luke 12:35-59 
'Be ready' for Christ's Return (40): Wait on the Lord (36; Isaiah 40:31). Stay 'awake' (37), 'your  loins girded with truth' (35; Ephesians 6:14) - be real; be true to the  Word of God. Keep 'your lamps burning' (35). Our 'lamp' is Christ, 'the  Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world' (Revelation 21:23; John  1:29). Be faithful (41-48): There can be no fruitfulness without  faithfulness. God's blessing is given to those who are faithful  (42-43). With the promise of blessing, there is also the warning of  judgment. Knowing the will of God and not doing it leads to judgment  (47). Going Christ's way will not be easy (49-53): We must avoid  the way of the 'hypocrites' who have no real knowledge of God (54-56),  the legalists who know nothing of the Spirit of grace (57-59). Keep  close to Christ: He will keep you - faithful and ready. 
29th September: Numbers 17:1-18:32 
The  call comes from God - to Aaron, to Christ (17:5; Hebrews 5:4-6). Christ  is both the Offering for sin and the Great High Priest (Hebrews 5:7-10;  2 Corinthians 5:21; Hebrews 7:25). We look at ourselves, and we say,  'We perish, we are lost, we are dead' (17:12). We look to Christ, and  everything changes (John 3:16; Luke 19:10; Ephesians 2:1). 'Service' and  'reward' (18:31): The Lord blesses those who serve Him faithfully each  day (1 Corinthians 15:58). Building on Christ, we seek to do work of  lasting value - 'gold, silver precious stones'. We dare not rest content  with shallow superficiality - 'wood, hay, straw'. There is 'a reward'  for those whose 'work' is 'built on the Foundation, which is Jesus  Christ' (1 Corinthians 3:10-15). 
30th September : Psalms 14:1-15:5 
Life  can be testing and trying. In all of this, God makes Himself real to  us. This is our assurance of faith: 'The Lord restores the fortunes of  His people'. He makes us 'glad' - In Him, we 'rejoice' (7). God Himself  is the Sure Foundation for our lives: Build on Him, and you 'shall never  be moved' (15:5). We long for God's blessing, 'O that salvation...would  come...' (7). He will not disappoint us. Do not be 'the fool' who 'says  in his heart, "There is no God"' (14:1). 'Fear the Lord' - 'and give  Him glory' (15:4; Revelation 14:7). We are to 'act wisely' - 'seeking  after God', 'calling upon the Lord' (14:2,4). Do you want to 'dwell on  God's holy hill' (15:1)? - 'There is a way for man to rise to that  sublime abode...' (Church Hymnary, 357): Christ is the Way to God and Heaven (John 14:2-6).
1st October: Numbers 19:1-22 
The  sacrifice was to be 'without defect'. There was to be 'no blemish' (2).  Here, we have a picture of the Lord Jesus Christ - 'without sin', He  offered Himself 'for the sins of the people' (Hebrews 4:15; 2:17). The  gathering of 'the ashes' (9-10) speaks of the completeness of Christ's  work for us - 'for all time a single sacrifice for sins' (Hebrews  10:12). The danger of becoming unclean through touching a 'dead body'  (11) - there is a warning for us here. 'Dead in trespasses and sins', we  have been 'made alive' in Christ (Ephesians 2:1). We dare not look back  (Luke 17:32; Genesis 19:26; Luke 9:62; 2 Peter 2:20-22). We have been  purified 'from dead works to serve the living God' (Hebrews 9:14).  Christ 'saves to the uttermost'. How dare we 'shrink back' from Him?  'Have faith. Be saved' (Hebrews 7:25; 10:39). 
2nd October: Numbers 20:1-29 
No man or woman is indispensable. God's work goes on, with or without us! (a) Miriam (Moses' sister) served and worshipped the Lord (Exodus 2:7-8;  15:20-21). Now, her time had come. She was not to enter the land. She  'died' (1). (b) Moses had been the leader of God's people. He  sinned, and he was excluded from the promised land (12). Do not rest on  your laurels. Yesterday's grace is not sufficient for today's  challenges. A day-by-day walk with the Lord is called for. (c) Aaron (Moses' brother) had stood alongside Moses in leadership. He 'died'  (28) without entering the promised land. In the leadership of God's  people, the names and the faces change - but the Lord never changes. He  remains unchanged, unchanging and unchangeable in His love. When Moses,  Aaron and Miriam had gone, God was still there! 
3rd October: Luke 13:1-35 
Jesus  stresses the need for both repentance (1-5) and the fruits of  repentance (6-9). God's Word, planted in our hearts at conversion, is to  bear fruit. This requires continual repentance and faith (Colossians  2:6; Galatians 3:1-5). Don't put it off till tomorrow! Today is 'the day  of salvation'. Don't 'neglect' God's 'great salvation' (15-16; 2  Corinthians 6:2; Hebrews 2:3). Let there be spiritual growth, affecting  the whole of your life (18-21). Jesus was 'journeying toward Jerusalem' -  to 'finish His course' at the Cross (22, 32-33). He came from the Lord  (35). Through Him, we come to the Lord (24; John 10:9). There is no  salvation in ourselves (25-27). Apart from Him, there is 'no peace'  (Jeremiah 6:14; 8:11). Jesus loves you (34). Make 'sure' that your trust  is in Him. He will never fail you (2 Peter 1:10-11). 
4th October: Numbers 21:1-35 
In  verses 5-9, there is an illustration of God's salvation (John 3:14-15).  There is sin and death (Romans 5-6; 3:23, 6:23). Christ prays for our  forgiveness (7; Luke 23:34). Lifted up on the Cross, He dies that we  might have eternal life. In love, He appeals to us, 'Look to me and be  saved' (John 12:32; Isaiah 45:22). Enter, Destroy Possess (21-24,  33-35): Let Christ enter your heart, destroying Satan's strongholds and  taking possession of your life (2 Corinthians 10: 3-5). If we are to be  victorious to the 'praise and glory and honour...of Jesus Christ' (1  Peter 1:6-8), we must 'go by the King's Highway, not turning aside to  the right hand or the left'(22; 20:17). For the Christian, 'the King's  Highway is 'the Way of Holiness': 'This is the way, walk in it' (Isaiah  35:8; 30:21). 
5th October: Numbers 22:1-41 
Learn  from the past. In 2 Peter 2:15-16, Jude 11 and Revelation 2:14, we are  encouraged to learn from the events of this chapter. Each passage  contains a warning. (a) 2 Peter 2:15-16 - Don't leave 'the straight way' and follow the crooked way! (b) Jude 11 - Don't let making a profit become more important than being a prophet! (c) Revelation 2:14 - Make sure you don't get drawn away from God into sin! What is God  saying to us here? - 'these things happened... as a warning... they were  written down for our instruction...let anyone who thinks that he stands  take heed lest he fall'. With the warning, there is also the promise:  '...God is faithful, and He will not let you be tempted beyond your  strength, but with the temptation will also provide a way of escape...'  (1 Corinthians 10:11-13). 
6th October: Luke 14:1-35: 
Let  God's love flow freely in your own heart. Let it flow, from there, into  the lives of others. Receive Christ and share Him with others. When the  Gospel says, 'Come; for all is ready', there must be no excuses  (17-20). When you share Christ, let there be no barriers (1-6, 12-14,  21-24). Let God's love flow freely - Make it your firm resolve to live  as Christ's 'disciple' (27,33). Some will be critical of you -  preoccupied with finding fault, they will miss the love of God(1-6).  This is part of the 'cost' of being a disciple - the 'cross' (27-28).  Others will respond positively: Keep your 'saltiness' - Be salty enough  to make others thirsty, and be ready to lead them to Christ when they  are thirsty 'for the living God' (34-35; Psalm 42:2). Remember to give  all the glory to God (11). 
7th October: Luke 15:1-32 
People  were coming to Christ (1). Still, the critics were murmuring among  themselves (2). What did Jesus do ? - He kept on preaching the Gospel  (3-32). The lost sheep (3-7) the lost coin (8-10), the lost son (11-32) -  These are the parables of the Gospel. They teach us two lessons - By  ourselves we are lost; In Christ, there is salvation. Read about the  prodigal son, and think of the perfect Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. In  Him, we see God's perfect love. Through Him, we receive God's perfect  salvation - (a) 'the best robe' - forgiveness (Revelation 7:13-14); (b)  the 'ring' - membership of God's family (John 1:12); (c) the 'shoes' -  empowered to bring 'the Gospel' to others (Ephesians 6:15). 'God...has  blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing' (Ephesians 1:3).  Don't be like the 'elder son' (28-30)! 
8th October: Numbers 23:1-30 
Our  words are to be an echo of God's Word. We are to speak only what God  says (8,12). Before we can speak for God, He must speak to us. 'God's  Word is truth' (John 17:17). God does not lie. He does not change His  mind. What He says, He does. He fulfils His purpose (19). How does God  carry forward His purpose of blessing? We receive His blessing. We share  His blessing with others. We can only bring blessing to others when we  ourselves seek blessing from the Lord. His blessing comes to us. His  blessing reaches out through us. We speak His Word, yet - through our words - He speaks (20). This is the work of the Holy Spirit. 'God's Word is the  sword of the Spirit' (Ephesians 6:17). The Spirit uses the Word to  convict us of our sin and lead us to our Saviour (Hebrews 4:12-16). 
9th October: Numbers 24:1-25 
When  'the Spirit of God came upon him', Balaam's 'oracle' was described as  'the message of the man who sees clearly'. His 'eyes are opened'. He  sees 'with far-seeing eyes'. He 'hears the words of God'. He 'sees the  vision of the Almighty' (2-4,15-16). Balaam looks beyond his own time.  'With far-seeing eyes', he prophesies concerning our Lord Jesus Christ:  'I see Him, but not now' (17). Balaam catches a glimpse of Jesus Christ,  the 'King of kings' (Revelation 19:16). This is what we must pray for:  'the revelation of Jesus Christ'. Pray that you will be 'in the Spirit',  ready to 'hear what the Spirit says'(Revelation 1:1,10; 2:7,11,17,29;  3:6,13,22). God is the unchanging God - Nothing changes Him (23:19). He  is also the changing God. He changed Balaam. He will change us! 
10th October: Luke 16:1-31 
How  do we use our money? This is an important question for all who want to  live a practical Christian life. The worldly person is quick to see ways  of making a profit. For the Christian, there is a higher priority.  Beyond personal profit, there is eternal profit. Look for opportunities  to support the work of the Gospel. By our giving, we help the Church to  be Christ's prophet in to-day's world. 'Make friends': Win others for  Christ so that, together with them, we may be welcomed to our eternal  home (9). Jesus said, 'You cannot serve God and money'. The 'lovers of  money' did not like His teaching (13-14)! Don't let money squeeze Christ  out of your life. Life without Christ leads to eternity without Christ  (19-31). 
11th October: Numbers 25:1-26:22 
Read  of Israel's adultery and idolatry and remember God's Word of warning:  'Don't let the world squeeze you into its mould' (25:1-5; Romans 12:2).  God is looking for people who have the 'same zeal' as He has (25:11).  Those who are zealous for God may be few in number, but we must not be  discouraged. Glorying in Christ our Saviour, we must continue to be  zealous for Him. In Christ we have 'peace', 'atonement' and a  'perpetual' salvation (25:12-13; Romans 5:1-2,9-10). We are saved to  serve - This is the thought contained in the phrase, 'all in Israel who  are able to go forth to war' (26:2). The wilderness wanderings were  over. God was doing a new thing. He was looking for a new people,  determined, by grace, to carry His work forward into the future. He is  still looking! 
12th October: Numbers 26:23-65 
There  is real sadness in the final words of this chapter: 'There was not left  a man of them, except Caleb and Joshua' (65). There is also a sense of  expectation. So many had died in the wilderness. This was now a new  generation. We're living in changing times. God is equipping His people  for new challenges. We must not stand still. We dare not say, 'It's  never been done that way before'! A new generation has to be won for  Christ. Will we rise to the challenge? Or, will we 'die in the  wilderness (65)? Taking possession of 'the promised land' would not be  easy. Making advances for Christ will not be easy. We must lay aside  those things which need to 'die in the wilderness'. We take hold of all  that God has done for us - if there is to be 'Good News for the next  generation'! 
13th October: Luke 17:1-37 
In verses 1-10, Jesus speaks about temptation, forgiveness, faith and service. (a) Temptation - 'watch yourselves', always remembering that we can only win victory  through the strength of the Lord (3; 1 Corinthians 10:13). (b) Forgiveness - This is practical teaching. We not only receive forgiveness for  ourselves. We are to forgive others (3-4; 1 John 1:9; Ephesians 4:32).  (c) Faith - There will never come a time when we no longer need  to pray, 'Increase our faith'. What great things can be achieved for  God, when our faith in Him is strong (5-6; 1 John 5:4-5, 14-15). (d) Service - We are always 'unworthy servants'. We never outgrow our need of  'God's mercy' (10; Romans 12:1; 2 Corinthians 4:1). We need 'the  attitude of gratitude' (17-18; 1 Thessalonians 5:18). Jesus is coming  again (24). Be ready for Him! 
14th October: Proverbs 5:15-23 
There  is teaching here concerning faithfulness in marriage: 'may you rejoice  in the wife of your youth...may you ever be captivated by her love  (18-19). We may apply this teaching to our relationship with the  Saviour. You loved Him so much in 'your youth'. You were 'rejoicing in  Him'. You were 'captivated by His love'. 'You were doing so well', but  something happened - you have gone off course (Galatians 5:7-8). Is this  the story of your life? Return to 'your first love' (Revelation 2:4-5).  There is also a warning against unfaithfulness (20). This can also be  applied to our relationship with Christ. He 'loved us and gave Himself  for us'. He calls us to be 'holy...a radiant church' (Ephesians  5:25-27). We belong to Him. Why settle for anything less than the Best,  anything less than our Lord Jesus Christ. 
15th October: Numbers 27:1-23 
The  daughters of Zelophehad were concerned about the continuation of their  father's name (1-11). Our first concern must be the glory of God, our  Heavenly Father. We are to honour our parents, loving them deeply. We  must not allow such love to compete with our love for Christ. He must  come first. We are called to a life of single-minded devotion to Jesus  Christ. Joshua is chosen to succeed Moses as the leader of God's people  (12-23). Soon, Moses would be gone. The Lord was preparing His people  for the future. God had His man - Joshua - waiting to continue the work  which Moses had begun. For each place and time, God has His 'Joshua'.  The work of God will go on. His work requires more than a 'Joshua'. What  part will you play in God's ongoing work? Will you take up the challenge? 
16th October: Numbers 28:1-31 
The  sacrifices, offered to God, were to be 'a pleasing odour' to Him  (2,6,8,13,24,27). These sacrifices are no longer required. A greater  Sacrifice has been offered and accepted. Jesus Christ, God's Son, has  offered Himself as a Sacrifice for sin (Hebrews 9:23-26). This Sacrifice  is 'a pleasing odour' to God. It is 'good news' for us. This is 'good  news' - the Gospel of our salvation: 'Christ died for our sins' (1  Corinthians 15:3). How do we know that Christ's Sacrifice is 'a pleasing  odour' to God? - God 'raised' Him from the dead (1 Corinthians 15:4).  The 'feast of weeks' (Pentecost) turns our thoughts towards the Holy  Spirit (26-31; Acts 2:1-4). It is through the power of the Holy Spirit  that the 'good news' of Christ becomes real in our lives. He brings us  to Christ and leads us on with Him (Acts 2:37-47). 
17th October: Luke 18:1-43 
Here, we learn some important lessons about faith. (a) Our faith is precious.  We must not lose it! The question is asked, 'When the Son of man comes,  will He find faith on earth?' (8). 'Don't lose heart' (1). (b) We are  to have a humble faith (14). Pray, 'God, be merciful to me a sinner' (13). 'Receive the Kingdom of God like a child' (17). (c) We are to have a committed faith (22), always remembering that salvation comes from the Lord and  not from ourselves (26-27). Our commitment can never be a way of earning  God's salvation. He always gives us so much more than we could ever  give to Him (29-30). (d) We are to have a Christ-centred faith, centred on His death and resurrection (31-33). (e) Our faith is to be full of worship. Our eyes opened by Christ and to Him, we are to glorify God and give praise to Him (43). 
18th October: Numbers 29:1-40 
Between the feast of weeks (Pentecost) and the feast of trumpets (28:26-29:6), there was the harvest. Pentecost - the outpouring of the Holy Spirit - has ushered in the time of Harvest - the saved are being gathered in as men and women are being won for  Christ. During this time of harvest, we 'blow the trumpets' of worship,  rejoicing in the Lord (1), and 'alarm', calling on men and women to pay  attention to the Word of the Lord (Joel 2:1). By blowing the trumpets  for God, we prepare the way for the final trumpet, 'the trumpet of God'  (1 Corinthians 15:52; 1 Thessalonians 4:16). We must get ready, and we  must encourage others to get ready, for Christ's Return.  Atonement (7-11), Tabernacles (12-40): Christ has 'tabernacled' among us  (John 1:14). He has made 'atonement' for us (Romans 5:11). Share the  Good News! 
19th October: Numbers 30:1-31:20 
Vows  (30:1-16): Be careful what you say - You may live to regret it  (Ecclesiastes 5:2, 4-6; Matthew 12:36-37; James 3:6-11). Learn from  Balaam. Full of good intentions about speaking God's Word (22:18;  23:12). He hoped to 'die the death of the righteous' (23:10). He did not  live up to his good intentions. He sinned and he led others into sin  (31:16). He ended up being slain among God's enemies (31:8). Why were  the Midianites destroyed (31:7-8)? They opposed the Lord, exerting an  evil influence on His people. We must take care that we do not cause  God's people 'to act treacherously against' Him (31:16). Sin needs to be  removed if we are to press on to a greater enjoyment of God's blessing.  'Put to death what is earthly in you...put off the old nature...put on  the new nature' (Colossians 3:5-11). This is what we must do. 
20th October: Luke 19:1-48 
Jesus  was on His way to Jerusalem (9:51; 13:22; 17:11), the place where He  would be crucified for the world's salvation. 'Passing through' Jericho,  He brought 'salvation' to Zacchaeus (1, 9). 'Near to Jerusalem', He  spoke about service (11-27). Jesus is our Saviour - He came 'to save us'  (10). He is also our Lord - He wants to 'reign over' us (27).  'Salvation has come to us (9). As 'good servants', let us be 'faithful'  to our Lord (17). Jesus was 'going up to Jerusalem' (28). The Cross was  the high point, the place of His triumph (Colossians 2:15). Seeing 'the  city', Jesus 'wept over it' (41). He taught the Word of God in the House  of God. Some were 'eager to hear Him'. Others were 'seeking to destroy  Him' (47-48). What about you ? Does Jesus weep over you? He wants to rejoice over you (15:7,10). 
21st October: Luke 20:1-47 
Think  before you speak. Jesus' critics had plenty to say for themselves.  Jesus challenged them. They needed to say less and think more - about  Jesus (8,17-18,41-44). Jesus' words reduced them to silence (26,40).  They didn't know what to say next. Perhaps, some were beginning to ask  the right questions and find the right answers (39). There were others  who didn't want to know. They weren't interested in listening to Jesus.  All that mattered to them was themselves: 'Beware of the scribes...'  (46-47). 'The scribes' were so taken up with themselves that they failed  to take the slightest notice of what the Lord was saying to them. The  way of 'the scribes' ended in 'condemnation'. There is a warning for us  here: Make sure you don't miss the most important thing - 'Jesus Christ  is in you' (2 Corinthians 13:5). 
22nd October: Numbers 31:21-54 
If  we are to be 'soldiers of Christ', we need to be 'purified', made  'clean'. There is purification by 'fire' and 'water'. Purification may  be painful, but we have the promise of God's protective presence. He  says, 'I will be with you'. He assures us, 'the waters...shall not  overwhelm you...and the flame shall not shall not consume you' (22-24;  Isaiah 43:2). From the Old Testament wars, we learn important spiritual  principles: Enter the war, Destroy the sins, Possess the land. This is what we must do throughout life. Looking beyond  Israel's triumphs to Christ's victory over Satan (Hebrews 2:14-15; 1  John 3:8), we thank God for His victory and we claim this victory by  faith (1 Corinthians 15:57; 1 John 5:4-5). The battle may be 'fierce'.  The 'victory is secure' (Church Hymnary, 479). Praise God! 
23rd October: Numbers 32:1-42 
Some  look for an easy life. They know that there will be conflict on the  other side of the Jordan. They opt out - 'do not take us across the  Jordan' (5). They think they've travelled far enough. God  says, 'Let us go on to maturity' (Hebrews 6:1). 'My happiness' - This is  what concerns the self-centred person. Spiritual maturity is not about  happiness. It's about holiness. We find happiness when we aim at  holiness. What is holiness? - 'It's the life apart from the world's  excess. It's the Lord's command, not the Lord's request. It's the only  life that the Lord can bless'. Pretend to be more holy than you really  are, and 'be sure your sin will find you out' (23). A small minority -  Caleb and Joshua - 'wholly followed the Lord' (12): Better a minority  with God than a majority without Him. 
24th October: Luke 21:1-38 
The  'poor widow' gave her 'all' to the Lord (1-4). True giving is a  response to 'the grace of God'. Learning to appreciate 'the grace of our  Lord Jesus Christ', we will learn to give with 'abundance of joy' and  'wealth of liberality' (2 Corinthians 8:1-2, 9). Let us give ourselves to our Lord. True Christian living will not be easy (12; 2 Timothy  3:12). The Lord will be with us in all our difficulties (15, 18-19).  Christ will return 'with power and great glory' (27). For some this will  be a time of 'distress...perplexity...fear...foreboding' (25-26). For  others, it will be the Day of 'redemption' (28). To all, there is the  warning: 'Take heed to yourselves...watch at all times' (34-36). Let us  restore Him to His rightful place in our lives - '...all the people came  to Him...' (38). 
25th October: Numbers 33:1-49 
In  the history of Israel - Set free by the power of God, failure to learn,  wandering, the promised land - , there is a picture of the Christian  life - conversion and growth to spiritual maturity by way of learning  from our mistakes. We are not to remain in the past. That would be  nostalgia. It is, however, a good thing for us to remember, with  gratitude, all the way the Lord has led us. This will increase our  appreciation of the goodness of God. It will deepen our sense of  indebtedness to Him. Israel's redemption was a mighty work of God. Our  salvation is a mighty work of God. Think back over your life - 'stage by  stage' (2) - and thank God for all that He has done. 'These are  the stages of' what the Lord has done (1): You may see the Lord in  places where you hadn't noticed Him before! 
26th October: Numbers 33: 50-34:29 
'Drive  out all the inhabitants of the land' (52): We must drive out the enemy  (Satan) if we are to enter more fully into our salvation in Jesus Christ  (Ephesians 5:3-14). Idolatry is to be banished (52). It has no place  among God's people. God wants us to 'possess the land' (53): a fuller  enjoyment of Him. Idolatry is settling for 'second best' - letting  something or someone else become more important to you than the Lord.  Don't let it happen! The setting of the boundaries of the land of Canaan  (34:1-29) is a reminder that there are boundaries in the Christian  life, boundaries set by God Himself, the boundaries of Holy Scripture.  When we move beyond the boundaries of God's holy Word, we move outside  the sphere of God's blessing. Live in the will of God - within the  boundaries set by His Word. 
27th October: Luke 22:1-38 
Jesus'  enemies were 'religious' men but they were not God's men (2). Behind  the scenes, there was the activity of 'Satan' (3). He 'disguises himself  as an angel of light' - Judas Iscariot was 'one of the twelve'! (3; 2  Corinthians 11:14). In reality, Satan is 'a roaring lion, seeking  someone to devour' (1 Peter 5:8). Jesus was in complete control of the  situation. He allowed Satan to carry out the plot which would lead to  his own defeat - at the Cross. As the whole situation gets darker, never  forget the purpose of Christ's death (19-20). Jesus was suffering - the  pain inflicted by His enemies (2) and the agony brought on by his  'friends' (21,31-34). His suffering was for us: 'Christ our Passover  Lamb has been sacrificed for us' (7; 1 Corinthians 5:7). In His  suffering is our salvation. 
28th October: Luke 22: 39-71 
Jesus  was 'greatly distressed... troubled... very sorrowful... ' (Mark  14:33-34). 'Nevertheless, in obedience to His Father's will, He chose  the way of the Cross (42; John 10:17-18). Satan - 'the power of  darkness' - would have his 'hour', but Jesus was to be 'seated at the  right hand of the power of God' (53,69). Jesus suffered much persecution  (63-71). He endured it 'for the joy that was set before Him', the joy  of 'bringing many son to glory' (Hebrews 12:2; 2:10). The way of the  Cross is never easy. It involves death to self (2 Corinthians 4:10-12).  Do not 'sleep'. Pray (45-46). Don't 'follow at a distance' and deny your  Lord (54, 57-58, 60). Keep close to Jesus. Let the 'rivers of living  water flow' (John 7:37-39; Acts 1:8). When you sin, let His 'Word' lead  you to repentance (61-62; Psalm 119:11). 
29th October: Numbers 35:1-36:13 
Cities  of refuge were provided for those who had killed someone accidentally.  This is a good illustration of fleeing to Christ for refuge. He is our  'strong tower'. We 'run' to Him and we are 'safe' (Hebrews 6:18;  Proverbs 18:10). God gave Israel a 'land'. They were not to 'defile the  land' (34). God has given us a Saviour. We are not to dishonour Him.  Christ is our 'inheritance'. Our full enjoyment of Him is still to come  (36:2-4, 7-9,12; Ephesians 1:18; Colossians 3:24; 1 Peter 1:4). How can  we enjoy our Saviour more fully ? - 'These are the commandments...'  (36:13). The names change. The places change. The principle remains the  same: Obedience to God. We have been redeemed by God. Let us live in  obedience to Him. There is nothing more important than this - if we  really want to enjoy His blessing 
30th October: Luke 23:1-25 
In  Jesus' trial, we see unity in evil (12). Politically, Pilate and Herod  were at odds with each other. Spiritually, they were united in their  opposition to Christ. Jesus was found guilty by neither Pilate nor Herod  (13-16). They were Very Important People. Jesus was a threat to them.  They held positions of great power. They could not allow Jesus to 'upset  the apple cart'. Three times, Pilate declared Jesus' innocence  (4,14,22). 'Public opinion' said, 'Crucify Him!' (21). Pilate had a  problem. He would be 'crucifying' himself - politically - if he ignored  public opinion. Pilate made his choice. Jesus had to go. Jesus went -  but He came back again! There is real human drama here, but there is  much more than that: There is God! Crucified by men, Raised by God (Acts 2:23-24): This is divine drama, the drama of redemption! 
31st October: Psalm 16:1-11 
'Thou  wilt show me the path of life; in Thy presence is fulness of joy; at  Thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore' (11). In this earthly  life, there are many difficulties. For all of God's people, there is  something better still to come. We must look not only at the things  which are happening now. We must look also to the glory which is yet to  come. Our hope of eternal glory is based on Christ's resurrection.  David's words (8-11) are quoted by Peter in connection with 'the  resurrection of the Christ' (Acts 2:24-33). 'Christ has been raised from  the dead...at His coming those who belong to Christ...will be raised  imperishable' (1 Corinthians 15:20-23, 52). 'The Lord is my chosen  portion...Therefore my heart is glad' (5,9). Is this your testimony? Choose Christ and be glad.
1st November: Deuteronomy 1:1-46 
With  the exception of Caleb and Joshua, the older generation - including  Moses - was not to enter the land (34-38). For the new generation, there  was a challenge. There must be no more failures. One wasted generation  was enough. This was the time for real commitment to the Lord. He loved  them - He had 'set the land before' them. They were to rise up in faith  and ' take possession of the land' (8). We are called to go on with the  Lord. 'You have stayed long enough' at a low level of Christian living.  God is calling us on to maturity: 'go in and take possession of the  land; (6,8; Philippians 3:13-14). Do not hesitate to move forward with  God: 'do not fear...It is a good land which the Lord gives us' (21,25).  Will we be the new generation, 'a new creation in Christ' (2 Corinthians 5:17)? 
2nd November: Deuteronomy 2:1-37 
During  their wilderness years, God's people had many problems. God is greater  than all the problems! Israel's journey began in the land of 'bondage'  (Exodus 2:23-25). From there, He led them to the land of promise, 'the  land which the Lord our God gives to us' (29). This is 'amazing grace':  'Through many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come; 'Twas  grace that brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home' (Mission Praise, 31). In the giving and taking of the land, we see both grace and faith:  I have begun to give...this land over to you; begin to take  possession...' (31). We are not saved by grace apart from faith. We are  'saved by grace through faith. We are not saved by faith without grace.  We are 'saved by grace through faith'. Saved by the Lord, let us press  on to a life of 'good works' (Ephesians 2:8-10). 
3rd November: Luke 23:26-24:12 
'God  chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong' (1 Corinthians  1:27). In his weakness, the thief on the cross trusted Christ for  salvation (42-43). Pilate, a man of power, rejected Christ, sending Him  off to be crucified (23:23-25). Jesus was 'delivered into the hands of  sinful men'. Jesus was 'crucified'. This was not, for Him, the end. He  rose from the dead (7). At the Cross, 'the centurion' described Jesus as  'a righteous man' (47). In the resurrection, God declared Him to be  much more than a righteous man - He is 'the Son of God' (Romans 1:4).  Don't be like those who do 'not believe', those who consider Christ's  resurrection to be 'an idle tale' (11). Something has 'happened',  something very wonderful - Jesus has risen from the dead:...  'believe...be saved' (12; Romans 10:9). 
4th November: Deuteronomy 3:1-29 
The  promised land was near. For Moses, it was 'so near and yet so far'. He  was excluded. Together with the sadness of Moses' exclusion, there was  the joy of the people's entrance (27-28). When we consider Moses'  sadness and the people's joy, we must remember this: Nobody  deserved to go into the land! The land was God's gift. Without His  strength, the people of Israel would fail. With Him, they would be  victorious: 'You shall not fear them; for it is the Lord your God who  fights for you' (22). There is here a basic principle of Christian  living: 'not by might , nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of  hosts' (Zechariah 4:6). 'In heavenly armour we'll enter the land. The  battle belongs to the Lord. No weapon that's fashioned against us will  stand, The battle belongs to the Lord' (Mission Praise, 639). 
5th November: Deuteronomy 4:1-43 
The  people of Israel were involved in the work of the Lord. The work was  based on God - not Moses. Moses would not be in the promised land. God would be there. Moses would 'not go over the Jordan'. As God's man. he  was to prepare the people for their task: 'you shall go over and take  possession of that good land' (22). Privilege involves responsibility.  Israel was a privileged people, redeemed by the Lord, delivered from  bondage 'by a mighty hand and outstretched arm' (34). Israel was a  responsible people, called to obey the Lord: 'Obey His laws and  commands' (40). The Lord our God is 'a merciful God' (31). He has saved  us. We are to serve Him. Let Him reign in your heart. Let there be 'no  other besides Him' (35). Flee to Christ for refuge (42-43), and live  each day with 'the attitude of gratitude'. 
6th November: Luke 24:13-53 
'In  all the Scriptures', Jesus teaches 'the things concerning Himself'  (27). Do 'our hearts burn within us...while He opens to us the  Scriptures?' (32). He calls us to be His 'witnesses', to preach His  message of salvation 'to all nations' (47-48). Before we can preach, we  must listen to Him. Before we can proclaim His resurrection, we must  consider His suffering for us: 'See my hands and my feet' (39) - even  after His resurrection, they still bear 'the mark of the nails' (John  20:25). Listen to Christ. Consider His suffering for you. Be 'clothed  with power from on high. Let the Lord 'bless' you, strengthening your  worship and filling you 'with great joy'. With all this going on in your  lives, we will consider it not only our responsibility but our joyful  privilege to be His 'witnesses' (48-53)! 
7th November: Deuteronomy 4: 44-5:33 
Obedience  is grounded in salvation. The Ten Commandments (7-21) are preceded by  the divine declaration: 'I am the Lord your God' who brought you...out  of the house of bondage' (6). He has redeemed us. We are to live for  Him. The Word of God was spoken to Moses before it was spoken by him (27). We cannot begin to live for the Lord until we begin to listen  to Him. The way of obedience is the way of blessing. Our obedience is  to be offered in a spirit of gratitude to God for His gracious  salvation. Never imagine it is because of our obedience that God loves  us. His love for us is always prior to our love for Him. Remember what  the Lord has done for you, and your love for Him will grow stronger.  Forget, and you love will grow weaker. Loved by God, let us love Him -  more! 
8th November: Deuteronomy 6:1-25 
'Hear'  and 'do' (1-3; James 1:22-25). In our obedience to God, there is to be  the fear of the Lord and love for the Lord (2,5). Fear and love: the two  belong together. God is holy - fear Him. God is love - love Him. This  is for every generation: 'you and your son and your son's son'(2). 'Love  the Lord your God with all your heart' (5). Teach the children well so  that the blessing of God may be 'prolonged' among us(7,2). Our promised  land - heaven (John 14:1-3) - is far better than Israel's promised land.  Through faith in Christ, we have received 'eternal life' (John 5:24;  6:40). Never take the Lord's blessing for granted. Always remember to  thank Him for all that He has done for you (10-12). Teach the children  what the Lord has done for them (20-23). Then, and only then, tell them  what they must 'do' for Him (24-25). 
9th November: Deuteronomy 7:1-26 
Enter,  Destroy, Possess (1-2). Don't try to jump straight from entering to  possessing. Don't forget to destroy. We enter the Christian life through  faith in Christ. We will not 'take possession of' a fuller enjoyment of  His salvation if we refuse to 'destroy' the obstacles to His blessing  in our lives. Sin is like a 'cancer'. It will 'kill' us if we let it  (Romans 6:23). This is why we must fight it - with 'the whole armour of  God' (Ephesians 6:10-17). From beginning to end, our salvation is the  work of God: '...it is because the Lord loves you...that He  has...redeemed you...' (6-8). The Lord's love speaks of His keeping  power. He will complete the work He has begun (17-19; Philippians 1:6).  Saved and kept by the power of God, we travel from Christ's Cross to our  Crown (Romans 1:16; 1 Peter 1:3-5; 2:24-25; 5:4). 
10th November: John 1:1-34 
Jesus  Christ is the Word of God. He is the Beginning. He is also the End  (1-3; Revelation 21:6). He is 'the Word...made flesh'. 'We have seen His  glory' (14). This is only the beginning. When He returns, we shall see  His glory - 'we shall see Him as He is' (1 John 3:2). From Him, there is  creation (1-3). From Him, there is salvation (12-13). In Him, we  receive the forgiveness of sins and the gift of the Holy Spirit  (29,32-34). He is the Word of God, the Lamb of God and the Son of God  (1,29,34). When we look at Jesus Christ, we see God - 'the 'Word was  God' (1), 'No one has ever seen God; the only Son, who is in the bosom  of the Father, He has made Him known' (18). Do you want to know what God  is like? - Look at Jesus (14:9). What do we see when we look at Him? -  'the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world' (29). 
11th November: Deuteronomy 8:1-9:21 
The  'wilderness' was a place of 'testing'. God was 'disciplining' His  people. He was teaching them to 'walk in His ways' (2,5-6). In the  'wilderness', we must remember this: 'man does not live by bread  alone...man lives by everything that proceeds out of the mouth of the  Lord' (3). Everything that proceeds out of the mouth of the Lord -  His warnings as well as His promises! He speaks to us in warnings:  'Take heed lest you forget the Lord your God...' (11). He speaks to us  in promises: 'the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land' (7).  'God forbid that I should glory...' (8:17-18; 9:4-6; Galatians 6:14).  God gave Israel the land. He gives us 'the Kingdom' (Luke 12:32). As  earthly kingdoms rise and fall, 'the God of heaven will set up a Kingdom  which shall never be destroyed' (Daniel 2:44). 
12th November: Deuteronomy 9:22-10:22 
'We  will give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the  Word' (Acts 6:4). Moses was an intercessor (25-29). The ministry of the  Word needs to be grounded in prayer. Prayerfully seeking the Lord's  help, we are to place His Word at the centre of the life of His people  (5). God shows His mercy by providing His servants to carry His Word in a  ministry of blessing to the people, a ministry which helps the people  to 'go in and possess the land' (8,10-11). In gratitude to God, our  Creator-Redeemer, we are to give ourselves to Him in obedience (12-15).  Let your heart and life be changed by the Lord, never forgetting this:  'He is your praise; He is your God, who has done for you...great...  things' (16-21). 'God...gives the growth' (22; Corinthians 3:7). Read Psalm 126:6 and pray! 
13th November: John 1:35-2:25 
Andrew  brought his brother, Simon Peter, to Jesus (40-42). 'You are...You  shall be...' (42). Jesus looks beyond what we are now. He sees what we  will become through the transforming power of His grace. The 'water'  became 'wine' (9). This was the Lord's doing. In Christ, we have been  'made alive'. This is the work of God. He is 'rich in mercy'. He loves  us with a 'great love' (Ephesians 2:4-5). At a wedding, Jesus rejoices  with those who rejoice (1-11). In the temple, He rebukes those who are  proud (13-17). There was 'death' in the temple. Those who were  spiritually 'dead' acted in complete disregard for the true purpose of  God's House - 'My House shall be called a house of prayer' (Matthew  21:13). 'Raised from the dead', we receive 'new life' (22; Romans 6:4).  Be real with Jesus. He will bless you (23-25). 
14th November: Deuteronomy 11:1-32 
God  is at work among His people, teaching them many lessons. Through His  precious promises and strong warnings, He leads us in the way of  obedience and blessing (31-32). If we are to enjoy the Lord's blessing,  we need the whole Word of God - the warnings as well as the promises.  Obedience to God - This is the most important thing in the life of  faith. Obedience demonstrates the reality of faith. By our obedience, we  show our 'love' for the Lord. We rejoice in 'all the great work of the  Lord'. By 'His mighty hand', He has provided for us a great salvation.  Our enjoyment of His salvation increases as we live in obedience to Him  (8-15). Without obedience, there can be no blessing (16-17). Teach  others to obey God - especially the 'children' (18-21). God is good. He  loves us (22-25). Obey Him. Choose blessing (26-28). 
15th November: Deuteronomy 12: 1-32 
In  our hearts, nothing else must compete with the Lord. There is no room  for idolatry. 'Destroy' everything that threatens to take the place of  God in your life. (2-3). We are not to 'do what is right in our own  eyes'. We are to worship as the Lord 'chooses' (5,8,13-14). Remove every  distraction. Get rid of those things which keep you from crowning  Christ as Lord of your life. When you are tempted to put other things  before the Lord, 'be careful not to be ensnared' in the ways of the  world (29-31). When we are tempted, we must take our stand on God's  Word. 'Everything' He has given to us - This means more than our  favourite passages! Don't 'add to it', making 'the traditions of men'  more important than the Word of God. Don't 'take from it', ignoring the  parts you don't like (32; Mark 7:8; Acts 20:27). 
16th November: John 3:1-16 
We  say, 'I'll turn over a new leaf'. Christ says, 'You must be born again'  (3,7). Our way of thinking begins with 'I'. Christ's way of salvation  begins with 'God': 'God so loved the world...' (16). Begin with 'I' and  you have sin, guilt and condemnation (Romans 3:10-11). Begin with God  and you have Good News for sinners: 'God shows His love for us in that  while we were yet sinners Christ died for us' (Romans 5:8). Through  faith in Christ, we are 'born of the Spirit' (6-8; 1:12). The Spirit of  God is the Spirit of holiness, love and truth. Those who are 'born of  the Spirit' are to live a life of holiness, love and truth (1 John  4:2-3,6-7,12-13; 5:2-3). 'Come to the light'. 'Do what is true'. 'Obey  the Son'. Let Christ increase. This is the work of the Spirit in us  (20-21,36,29,34). 
17th November: Proverbs 6:1-15 
'Save yourself ...like a bird from the hand of the fowler' (5). 'He will deliver you from the snare of the fowler'(Psalm 91:3). In scripture, we have both  the promise of grace and the call to faith: 'By grace you have been  saved' (Ephesians 2:5), 'Your faith has saved you' (Luke 7:50), 'Keep  yourselves in the love of God', 'To Him who is able to keep you from  falling (Jude 21,24). Laugh at 'the sluggard' (6-11), but do not laugh  too quickly or too long: You may be laughing at yourself! Looking at the  sluggard is like looking into a mirror. We see so much of ourselves in  him! 'A worthless man, a wicked man' - He 'fancies himself' - He's 'a  chancer'. He better watch out: God doesn't share this man's opinion of  himself - 'calamity will come...he will be broken beyond healing' (15). 
18th November: Deuteronomy 13:1-14:21 
Obedience  to God involves an uncompromising attitude toward those who would lead  people away from God. Those who say 'Let us go and serve other gods'  (13:2,6,13) must not be permitted to exert their evil influence on God's  people. God says, 'You must not listen to them (13:3,8). Temptations to  'idolatry' can come under the guise of 'spirituality' - 'a prophet...a  dreamer of dreams...a sign or a wonder' (13:1; 1 John 4:1). 'Idolatry'  can come from within one's own family. The Lord must come first  (13:6-11; Luke 14:26). God's judgment is upon 'idolaters' so that others  may see their folly, turn from 'idolatry' and receive God's mercy  (13:12-18). Remember God's purpose of love (John 3:17). In our worship  and in the whole of life, we are to be 'a people holy to the Lord our  God' (14:2,21). 
19th November: John 4:1-42 
Here,  we see Jesus' ministry of love. He brings the Samaritan woman out of  her bondage to sin and into the joy of His salvation. Jesus comes to the  woman in love. His love overcomes cultural divisions. His love breaks  down cultural barriers (9). This is not simply the story of one woman.  It is the story of 'many Samaritans' coming to faith in Christ (39).  There are two 'stages' in their coming to faith. First, they 'believed  in Him because of the woman's testimony' (39). Second, 'they believed  because of His Word' (41). The Samaritans came to trust Jesus as 'the  Saviour of the world' (42). The woman said that 'salvation is of the  Jews' (22). It is also 'to the Greek' (Romans 1:16). The Gospel is for  all. Pray that the human word will be empowered by the divine Word (1  Thessalonians 1:5; 2:13). 
20th November: John 4:43-5:29 
In  Jesus' healings, we see the love of God. He 'went about doing good'. In  His healings, we see the Source of His spiritual strength: 'God  anointed Him with the Holy Spirit and with power' (Acts 10:38). We look  beyond Jesus to God the Father: 'mighty works and wonders and signs  which God did through Him' (Acts 2:22). Jesus speaks of His unique  relationship with the Father (19,26). Jesus is no mere servant. He is  'the Son'. We are to 'honour the Son' as well as the Father (23).  Through Christ, we receive 'eternal life' (24). The gift of eternal life  is the gift of God's love. In love, God 'gave His only Son'. 'In His  Son', there is eternal life. 'This life' is given to everyone who  'believes in the Son of God' (3:16; 1 John 5:10-12). Listen to 'the  voice of the Son of God', believe and 'live' (25). 
21st November: Deuteronomy 14:22-15:23 
'Tithing'  (Giving the tenth to God) emerges out of holiness: 'You are a people  holy to the Lord your God...You shall tithe' (14:21-22). It is more than  giving things to God. It is giving ourselves to Him. It also involves  caring for others (7-11; Isaiah 58:6-7). We have been 'earmarked' as  servants of the Lord (17). Being 'earmarked' for God involves listening  to God (Isaiah 55:2-3). Bring 'the firstling' to God (19). 'We are here  to bring You the best that we can bring. And it is our love rising from  our hearts' (Mission Praise, 717). 'Just as I am...to be the best that I can be for truth, and righteousness, and Thee, Lord of my life, I come' (Church Hymnary, 448). No second bests - Only the best will do for God. 
22nd November: John 5:30-6:21 
'Search  the Scriptures' - and make sure you 'come to Christ and receive life'  (39-40). From Jesus' miracles - the feeding of the five thousand (1-13)  and His walking on water (16-21) - we learn about faith in Christ. Jesus  is more than a 'prophet'. He is 'the Bread of God...which comes down  from heaven' (14,33). He is not merely a human 'king'. He is the divine  King - 'Lord of lords and King of kings' (15; Revelation 17:14). When  the storms of life are raging, Jesus says, 'It is I; do not be afraid'  (20). He assures us of His final victory - 'they will make war on the  Lamb, and the Lamb will conquer them' (Revelation 17:14). 'Will your  anchor hold in the storms of life?...We have an anchor that keeps the  soul...Grounded firm and deep in the Saviour's love' (Church Hymnary, 412). 
23rd November: John 6: 22-59 
Jesus  said, 'I am the Bread of Life; he who comes to Me shall not hunger, and  he who believes in Me shall never thirst' (35). Jesus had enemies -  'The Jews then murmured at Him, because He said, 'I am the bread which  comes down from heaven' (41). Christ's enemies are still with us. They  'murmur among themselves' (43). How are we to respond to this situation?  We must feed on Jesus Christ, 'the Living Bread' (51). Whatever  difficulties we may face, the Lord provides for us: 'You prepare a table  before me in the presence of my enemies' (Psalm 23:5). We have His  invitation: 'O taste and see that the Lord is good! (Psalm 34:8). With  His provision and invitation, let us make our response: 'We taste Thee, O  Thou living Bread, and long to feast upon Thee still' (Church Hymnary, 571). 
24th November: Deuteronomy 16:1-17:13 
Blessed  by God, the people of Israel had much to celebrate. They had been  brought out of the land of bondage. They were about to enter the land of  promise. The keeping of the feasts (16:1-17) was a response to God's  love, a way of celebrating His love. Why did God bring Israel to the  promised land? It was because He 'loved them' (Psalm 44:3). The Passover  was a continuing reminder of God's mighty work of redemption. The  Lord's Supper is a memorial of what God has done for us in Christ. In  remembering His dying love for us, we remember what we were without Him  and we give thanks for all that He has done for us. As well as 'joy'  (45), there is to be justice (16:18-17:13; Micah 6:8). Note the effect  of justice: 'And all the people shall hear, and fear, and not act  presumptuously again' (17:13). 
25th November: John 6:60-7:36 
Jesus'  words are 'spirit and life'. They are 'the words of eternal life'  (63,68). While others - including Judas Iscariot - were drawing back  from following Jesus, Peter confessed his faith in Jesus: 'You are the  Holy One of God' (66-71). It was only a matter of time before Judas  Iscariot (71) and 'the Jews'(1) formed an unholy alliance. The 'time'  was 'not yet' (6,8). Even the plans of evil men could only be fully  developed in the Lord's time. When God permitted their evil plans to  proceed, then it would be His time for Jesus' crucifixion and our  salvation (Acts 2:23). 'The Jews' were amazed at Jesus' teaching - 'How  is it that this man has learning when he has never studied? (15). They  did not understand that God's wisdom is different from man's wisdom.  Obey God. Receive wisdom (17; 1 Corinthians 1:18-25). 
26th November: John 7:37-8:20 
'Rivers  of living water' were flowing out of Jesus' heart. 'No man ever spoke  like this man'! 'The Spirit' was speaking through Him with power. Still,  there were those who 'wanted to arrest Him' (37-39,44,46). Stop  'throwing stones' (1-11)! Only Jesus had the right to point the finger  at this woman. He refused to do so. He bore her sins and our sins on the  Cross (1 Peter 2:24). Jesus spoke to the woman of both forgiveness and  holiness (11). Jesus said, 'I am the light of the world' (12). This  brought an immediate reaction from the 'Pharisees': 'Your testimony is  not true' (13). They were 'disguised as angels of light' (2 Corinthians  11:14). They 'loved darkness rather than light' (3:19). Their 'darkness'  was exposed by 'the Light of the world'. These evil men could do  nothing until God's time (19-20). 
27th November: Deuteronomy 17:14-18:22 
Even  the king is subject to God's 'law'. His supreme responsibility is this:  Pay careful attention to God's Word (17:18-20). Politically, he may be  in an elevated position - a 'king over' others (17:14-15). Spiritually,  he must not allow 'his heart' to be 'lifted up above his brethren'  (17:20). There must be humble obedience to God's Word. Priests speak to  God for us. Prophets speak to us for God. We need both - 'prayer and the  ministry of the Word' (Acts 6:4). In our worship, we must keep the Lord  at the very centre. Anything or anyone who distracts our attention from  the Lord is no help to true worship (9-14). 'A prophet like Moses'  (18:15): Jesus is the ultimate prophet - to see and hear Him is to see  and hear God (John 5:19; 12:49; 14:9). He preaches God's Word. He is 'the Word of God' (John 1:1). 
28th November: John 8:21-58 
In  the face of evil unbelief and persistent opposition, Jesus spoke with  tremendous assurance: 'You are from below, I am from above; you are of  this world, I am not of this world...you will die in your sins unless  you believe that I am He' (23-24). 'As He spoke thus, many believed in  Him (30) - Jesus spoke with power and love. Responding to Him in faith,  we are set 'free' (32,36; Romans 8:2; Galatians 5:1). To receive His  freedom, we must recognize our need: 'everyone who commits sin is a  slave to sin' (34). To grow in His freedom, we must 'continue in His  Word' (31). To religion without Christ (39,41), Jesus' answer is  emphatic: 'You are of your father the devil...you do not hear God's  words because you are not of God' (44,47). 'I am' (58; Exodus 3:14). God  is in control - not men (59,20). 
29th November: John 9:1-41 
Empowered  by God, Jesus gives sight to the blind man (3,6-7). 'The Pharisees'  hear the man's testimony (15). 'Some of' them reject the Lord (16,24).  There will always be those who refuse to believe in the saving power of  the Lord Jesus Christ. They will pour scorn on those who have come to  know the Lord. The man gives his testimony: 'One thing I know...I was  blind, now I see' (25). The Pharisees continue to fire questions at him  (26). He puts the most challenging question to them: 'Do you too want to  become His disciples?' (27). They hurl insults at him (28). Fools  attack what they don't understand. The more they rage, the more they  show their folly. We say, 'Lord, I believe', and our spiritual 'eyes'  are opened (38; 2 Corinthians 4:6). Don't be 'blind', despising the  believer and the Saviour (39-40; 2 Corinthians 4:4). 
30th November: Psalm 17:1-15 
Here  is the prayer of a man whose earnest desire is to walk with God, to  have a close walk with God in the centre of His will (5). His prayer is  sincere. It 'does not rise from deceitful lips' (1). He is painfully  aware of 'the onslaughts of the wicked'. His 'enemies cluster round him,  breathing hostility' (9). Whatever troubles we may encounter, we must  learn to pray with the Psalmist: 'Hear, O Lord, my righteous plea;  listen to my cry. Give ear to my prayer' (1). As we call upon the Lord,  He gives the assurance of His protection. Through His Word and Spirit,  He assures us that He will 'keep us as the apple of His eye' (8). We are  precious in His sight. He looks upon us in love. He does not see our  sin. He sees us 'in Christ' - 'accepted in the Beloved', 'no  condemnation' (Psalm 32:1; Ephesians 1:6; Romans 8:1).
1st December: John 10:1-42 
The  Christian life is not easy. The devil 'comes only to steal and kill and  destroy' (10). Satan was working through the religious leaders. They  were trying 'to stone' Jesus (31). 'Again', they failed (39). They could  not take Jesus' life. 'His hour had not yet come' (18; 7:30; 8:20).  When Satan attacks us, we must remember this: God is in control. God has  given us great promises (28-29). Jesus saves. Jesus keeps. His  salvation is eternal: 'He didn't bring us this far to leave us. He  didn't teach us to swim to let us drown. He didn't build His home in us  to move away. He didn't lift us up to let us down'. Satan will cause us  plenty of trouble. Be on the alert (1 Peter 5:8). Keep your eyes fixed  on Jesus (Hebrews 12:2). Looking to Jesus, we are assured of this: Satan  will be defeated (Revelation 12:9). 
2nd December: Deuteronomy 19:1-20:9 
Justice  is concerned with (a) the protection of the innocent - 'innocent blood  will not be shed in your land' (10); (b) the punishment of the guilty -  'you must purge the evil from among you' (19). Through justice, God is  to be glorified among His people. We are to fight for the Lord without  fear, confident of His glorious presence (20:1-4). In the service of the  Lord, we must not be 'fearful and fainthearted' (20:8). We are to be  'good soldiers of Jesus Christ' (2 Timothy 2:3). We need to give careful  attention to the Word of God: 'When you draw near to the battle, the  priest will come forward and speak to the people, and say to them,  'Hear, O Israel...' (20:2-3). God's Word is not concerned only with  'Church work'. It sends us 'back to our house' - 'dedicated' to the Lord  (20:5-9). 
3rd December: Deuteronomy 20:10-21:23 
The  offer of 'peace' is made (20:10; Romans 5:1). Some refuse to 'make  peace'.They choose to 'make war' (20:12). When the enemies of Christ and  the Gospel are raging, we must be resolute in our commitment to living  'as the Lord our God has commanded' (20:16-18). We are to 'do what is  right in the sight of the Lord'. This will involve 'going forth to war  against our enemies'. It will involve 'purging the evil from our midst'  (21:9-10,21; Ephesians 6:10-13; 2 Corinthians 10:3-5; Hebrews  12:1-2,11). Our life of holiness is grounded in the death of Christ who,  on the Cross, was 'accursed by God' so that we might be saved by God  (21:23; 2 Corinthians 5:21; Galatians 3:13; 1 Peter 2:24). Through faith  in Him, we have been declared holy (Romans 5:1,3-5,9-10). 
4th December: John 11:1-44 
Everything  is moving on towards Christ's death and resurrection. On His way to the  Cross, Jesus performs a mighty miracle - the raising of Lazarus (43-44)  - which points unmistakably to an even greater miracle - His own  resurrection (Acts 2:24). Accompanying this miracle - the raising of  Lazarus - , we have Jesus' great declaration concerning Himself: 'I am  the resurrection and the life; he who believes in Me, though he die, yet  shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die'  (25). His words are immediately followed by the question: 'Do you  believe this?' (26). This question is put to each of us. Jesus waits for  the answer of faith: 'Yes, Lord I believe that You are the Christ, the  Son of the living God...'(27). This is 'for the glory of God' -  receiving new life from 'the Son of God...' (4). 
5th December: Deuteronomy 22:1-30 
Care  for 'your brother' (1-4). Our caring is not to be selective - 'If the  brother does not live near you or if you do not know who he is' (2).  When Jesus says, 'Love your neighbour as yourself' (Luke 10:27), He  means much more than loving the people who live near us, the people that  we know. The 'Samaritan' didn't know 'the man who fell into the hands  of robbers' (Luke 10:30,33). 'Jews did not associate with Samaritans  (John 4:9). Jesus says, 'Love your enemies (Matthew 5:44). Love your  enemies with the love of the Lord - 'when we were God's enemies, we were  reconciled to Him through the death of His Son' (Romans 5:8,10). Don't  love the ways of those who 'live as enemies of the Cross of Christ'  (Philippians 3:18). 'Purge the evil from the midst of you' (21-22,24). 
6th December: Deuteronomy 23:1-25 
God  sees us as we really are. He 'looks on the heart' as well as 'the  outward appearance'. We must live to please Him, praying, 'Search me, O  God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see if there be  any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!' (14; 1  Samuel 16:7; Psalm 139: 23-24). God calls us to be holy: 'you shall keep  yourself from every evil thing' (9). This 'holiness' is not to be a  proud, arrogant thing. It is to be filled with compassionate caring.  Don't write anyone off, saying, 'They're not our kind of people' (7).  Don't be all out for all you can get for yourself without any thought of  how your actions affect other people (24-25). Let your holiness be  real. Don't say one thing and do another. Don't pretend to be more  'holy' than you really are. Choose to be holy - every day (21-23). 
7th December: John 11:45-12:36 
The  Pharisees are developing their wicked plan. God is fulfilling His  saving purpose (49-53). The voice of 'common sense' is not always the  voice of the Lord (4-6). There is a higher wisdom than 'common sense'.  We are to be sensitive to the Holy Spirit. He leads us to put Jesus at  the centre of our lives. Jesus is not suggesting that the poor are  unimportant. He is emphasising that we must not lose sight of Him. If  our concern for the poor is not truly grounded in devotion to Christ, it  is not the obedience of faith (8). The Pharisees are lying in wait for  Jesus. They say, 'The world has gone after Him' (19). They are going  after Him too - in a different way! The crucifixion draws near. God is  to be 'glorified' in the defeat of Satan and the salvation of sinners  (28,31-32). Jesus had 'come' for this 'hour' (27). 
8th December: Deuteronomy 24:1-25:29 
Justice  for the vulnerable is grounded in God's redemption (24:17-18). This is  an important principle for us. God loves us. He has done great things  for us. He cares. We are to care. Let His love be the guiding light in  every part of your life. Scripture speaks of both salvation and  judgment. Israel was given 'the land' as 'an inheritance to possess'.  The Amalekites were blotted out (25:19). The Christian life is a  spiritual warfare. When we are 'faint and weary', we will be 'attacked  on the way'. If we 'lag behind' in our walk with God, those who 'do not  fear God' will try to 'cut us off' from the Lord and His people. This is  the work of Satan. We must not be 'ignorant of his devices'. God is  with us in the battle. He is leading us on to our eternal 'inheritance'  (25:17-19; 2 Corinthians 2:11). 
9th December: Deuteronomy 26:1-27:10 
The  people of Israel had a testimony. They had been redeemed by the God of  love. Thankful for His love and salvation, they brought their offerings  to the Lord (26:5-9). The call to obedience is grounded in the gift of  salvation. Redeemed by the Lord, we are called to be 'a people holy to  the Lord our God' (26:16-19). There is no privilege without  responsibility. Israel was privileged: God was giving them 'a land  flowing with milk and honey'. Israel was responsible: God was saying to  them, 'Keep all the commandments which I command you this day' (27:1-3).  God blesses us. We obey Him. We enjoy more of His blessing. This leads  us to obey Him more. Break the 'vicious circle'. Get on to God's  'victorious circle': He shows us His love. We love Him. He shows us more  of His love. We love Him more... (John 14:21). 
10th December: John 12:37-13:20 
The  Pharisees continue to exert their evil influence. 'For fear of the  Pharisees', many remained silent, 'loving the praise of men more than  the praise of God' (42-43). Whatever the opposition, Jesus calls us to  believe in Him and confess Him (Romans 10:9). He calls us out of  darkness into light (46). If you are a believer, come out into the open.  Make it known that you belong to Christ. Do not only read God's Word  for yourself. Speak His Word to others (50). he 'hour' of Jesus'  suffering draws near. Satan is busy. Jesus is in control (1-3). It is  the 'hour' of His love. We are 'washed' in His precious blood (8; 1 John  1:7; Revelation 7:14). What God has done for us comes before what we  'ought to 'do for others. Jesus is our Saviour before He is our  'Example' (14-15). Knowing Him, let us do His will (17). 
11th December: Deuteronomy 27:11-28:24 
Through  His strongly worded warnings, God calls us back from the way of  disobedience (27:15-26;28:15-24). Through His promises of blessing, He  calls us to the way of obedience, the only way to true happiness  (28:1-14). God's blessing cannot be taken for granted. Where there is  disobedience, there is no blessing. Our 'enemies' will triumph over us  (28:25). We need not be defeated. God has shown us His way of blessing.  It is the way of obedience (1-2). We are not blessed because we deserve  to be blessed. We can never earn the Lord's blessing. The blessing comes  from Him (8). He blesses us because He loves us - not because we are  worthy of His blessing. You can be in 'the promised land' without  enjoying the promised blessing. Don't 'suffer loss' - 'saved, but only  as through fire' (1 Corinthians 3:15). 
12th December: Deuteronomy 28:25-68 
There  is nothing inevitable about the chain of events described in these  verses. These are the consequences of disobedience. God is warning His  people: 'If you will not obey the voice of the Lord your God...'  (28:15). Why does God warn His people of the consequences of  disobedience? He wants them to draw back from the way of disobedience  and follow the pathway of obedience and blessing. These 'curses' were  avoidable. They would only happen if Israel persisted in rebelling  against the Lord. We can bring 'curses' upon ourselves. Don't imagine  that God doesn't care how you live. He does. That is why He calls us  back from the pathway of disobedience. That is why He exhorts us to  choose holiness. Read Hebrews 10:26-31; 12:25-29. Pray for God's mercy  (Luke 18:13). Ask Him to make you more holy (Hebrews 12:14). 
13th December: John 13:21-14:14 
Difficult  times lay ahead for Jesus. He would be betrayed by Judas Iscariot  (21-30). He would be denied by Peter (36-38). For Jesus, there was His  departure (31-33). It would be a difficult time for His followers. He  tells them to 'love one another': 'By this all men shall know that they  are His disciples' (34-35). Jesus points them beyond the difficult  times. He speaks of His glorious future. He assures them that the best  is yet to be. He is preparing a place in His 'Father's House' for us. He  will come again to take us to Himself (1-3). He is the Way to this  place, the true and living way (6). Now, He reveals the Father to us  (9). Now, He is working in and through us (12-14). He is preparing us  for His place: 'Lord Jesus...fit us for heaven, to live with Thee there'  (Church Hymnary, 195). 
14th December: Deuteronomy 29:1-29 
God  has done great things for His people - 'in the land of Egypt...in the  wilderness' (2,5). Acknowledging Him to be the Lord their God, they were  to live in obedience to Him (6,9). The way of obedience is the way of  blessing. Moses warns the people that they must not depart from the way  of blessing. Moses warns the people that they must not depart from the  way of obedience (16-28). Turning away from the Lord leads to judgment -  'anger and fury and great wrath' (24-28). There are 'secret things'.  There are 'things that are revealed'. Some 'things' we will never  understand. These 'things belong to the Lord our God'. There are many  'things' we have learned and have firmly believed. 'The things that are  revealed' are found in 'the Holy Scriptures'. Through God's written  Word, we are brought to 'salvation' and we are 'thoroughly equipped' for  Christian living (29; 2 Timothy 3:14-17). 
15th December: Deuteronomy 30:1-31;13 
For  Israel, a real turning to the Lord with 'all the heart and soul'  involved obedience to 'His commandments...written in this book of the  law' (30:10). We are not left wondering what God wants us to do -  '...the Word is very near you...'(11-14). Through His Word, God 'sets  before' us a choice. He calls us to 'choose life' (15-20). Joshua was to  succeed Moses (31:1-2,7-8). Conflict lay ahead. God's people needed His  Word of encouragement: 'Be strong and of good courage, do not fear or  be in dread of them'. Beyond the conflict, there would be triumph. God  gave His Word of promise: 'It is the Lord your God who goes with you; He  will not fail you or forsake you' (31:6). Turning from the people to  Joshua, Moses spoke the same words (31:7-8). Hear; Learn to fear the  Lord; Be careful to obey His Word (31:12-13). 
16th December: John 14:15-15:17 
Those  who love the Lord are called to a life of obedience - keeping His  'commandments', keeping His 'Word' (21,23). We cannot live this life in  our own strength. Christ must make His home in us (23). Once He has come  to live in us, we are to abide in Him (4). Jesus says to us, 'Apart  from me you can do nothing' (5). You cannot live the Christian life  until Christ comes to live in you. 'The Holy Spirit teaches us all  things' (26). Christ's 'words' abide in us (7). We are called to a life  of fruitfulness (15:5,15) - 'the fruit of the Spirit': 'love, joy,  peace...' (Galatians 5:22-23). Jesus loves us (21). He gives us His  peace (27). He gives us His joy (11). Love, Joy, Peace: Let this 'fruit'  be seen in us. Let it be shared with others. 'Love one another...Go and  bear fruit...love one another' (15:12,16-17). 
17th December: Proverbs 6:16-35 
God's  Word is our 'lamp' and 'light' (23; Psalm 119:105). It leads us in the  way we are to go (22). It exposes the darkness of the ways we are to  avoid. It shows us the 'things that the Lord hates', the things which  are 'an abomination to Him' (16). Why does God list the 'things' which  are not pleasing to Him? He wants us to watch how we live. He wants us  to keep on choosing His way. We must not allow things to drift. Keep  God's Word in 'your heart always' (21). Let 'the reproofs of discipline'  keep you from straying (23). The world tells us, 'Anything goes. Do  what you like. It doesn't matter how you live'. God's Word speaks about  sin: There is 'no sense' in it. It is the way of self destruction. It  will not 'go unpunished' (32,29). Be careful to obey God in everything. 
18th December: John 15:18-16:33 
Jesus  was 'persecuted'. We will be 'persecuted' - 'all who desire to live a  godly life will be persecuted' (15:20; 2 Timothy 3:12). We have no  guarantee that life will be easy. In all our difficulties, 'the Spirit  of truth' directs our attention to Jesus our Saviour (15:26; 16:13-15).  Whatever our problems, we draw encouragement from Jesus' words: 'In the  world you have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the  world' (16:33). Here, we have realism and faith. The world is trying to  squeeze us into its own mould (Romans 12:2). Sometimes, we feel like  faith is slipping away. Sometimes, we feel like giving up. What are we  to say to all this? 'Who is it that overcomes the world buy he who  believes that Jesus is the Son of God?' - This is our faith' (1 John  5:4-5). 
19th December: John 17:1-26 
Jesus  prays for you. Jesus prays for me. We have come to faith in Him through  the written Word of His apostles (20). The story of the Cross (1-5),  the story of the first disciples (6-19) is an ongoing story. It  continues in us. The saving effects of Christ's death are still being  felt today. The written Word of His apostles is still exerting its  powerful influence on today's world. Jesus is still praying for us  (Hebrews 7:25). He prayed for His first disciples - 'that they may be  one' (11). He prays the same prayer for us (20-23). Among His first  disciples, there was Judas Iscariot, 'the one who chose to be lost'  (12). If we are to 'maintain the unity of the Spirit', we must take  account of 'the Judas factor' - 'take notice of those who create  dissensions...avoid them' (Ephesians 4:3; Jude 4; 1 John 2:18-19; Romans  16:17-18). 
20th December: Deuteronomy 31:14-32:18 
'Write  this song, and teach it to the people of Israel' (19,22). Moses did not  delay his obedience to God. 'Write...Teach...': God is speaking to us  about the renewal of our worship. Don't say, 'It's never been done that  way before' - 'the seven last words of the church'! Moses' song was 'a  witness for God against the people of Israel' (19). It can still help  us, in this generation, to confess our sin - We 'have dealt corruptly  with Him' (5) - and glorify our God - 'I will proclaim the Name of the  Lord' (3). Modern music can help us to hear afresh the ancient message:  'Ascribe greatness to our God...' (3-4; Mission Praise, 40). Let us praise God 'in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs' (Ephesians 5:18-20). 
21st December: Deuteronomy 32:19-33:17 
Here,  we have both the warning of judgment and the promise of salvation.  Rebuking 'a perverse generation' - 'They are devious people, children  who can't be trusted' - God says, 'I will hide My face from them' (20).  When, in our need, we look to Him for mercy, we have His promise: 'The  Lord will...have compassion on His servants, when He sees their power is  gone' (36). 'This is the blessing...'(1). For each tribe - Reuben (6),  Judah (7), Levi (8-11), Benjamin (12), Joseph (13-17) - , there is a  different Word from the Lord. Each of us is different. Our circumstances  are different. God knows what we need to hear. He speaks the Word which  is just right for each one. He 'loves' every one of us. We are 'in His  hands'. Let us 'follow in His steps, receiving direction from Him' (3). 
22nd December: John 18:1-27 
The  story continues. Jesus is betrayed. Jesus is arrested (1-11). He stands  before the Jewish authorities (12-14,19-24). Jesus is 'drinking from  the cup which the Father has given Him' - He drinks from the cup of our  condemnation that we might drink from the cup of His salvation (11;  Matthew 26:38-39; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26). Jesus'  death was not only 'expedient'. It was 'necessary' - for our salvation  (14; Luke 24:26). Alongside the story of Jesus was the story of Peter  (15-18,25-27). Jesus' death was not the end of His story - He rose from  the dead (Luke 24:5-6; Acts 2:23-24). Peter denied the Lord three times.  This was not the end of his story. For each denial, there was a new  commitment (21:15-17). For each denial, there were, on the Day of  Pentecost, 1,000 people brought to Christ (Acts 2:38,41). 
23rd December: John 18:28-19:16 
'Barabbas  was a robber'. He was released (39-40). There was 'no crime' in Jesus.  He was 'crucified' (38,4,6,16). Was Jesus not more than the innocent  victim of a shameful and tragic miscarriage of justice? No! Jesus, the  King of kings, chose to die. Looking ahead to the Cross, He said, 'For  this I was born...' (36-37). In love, He chose death on the Cross. As  truly as Barabbas, each of us can say, 'He took my place and died for  me'. In His death, Jesus did not only take the place of one sinner,  Barabbas - 'He took the place of many sinners'. He did not simply bear  the punishment deserved by one sinner, Barabbas - 'The Lord made the  punishment fall on Him, the punishment all of us deserved' (Isaiah  53:12,6). 
24th December: Matthew 1:18-25 
'Immanuel...God  with us' (23). Think of what this means! Here are some words to help  you. 'He walked where I walked, He stood where I stand, He felt what I  feel, He understands. He know my frailty, shared my humanity, tempted in  every way ,yet without sin. God with us, so close to us. God with us,  'Immanuel!'. Let your thoughts move on to the Cross - 'He died in my  place that I might live'. Let your heart be filled with worship:  'Immanuel, O Immanuel, Bowed in awe I worship at your feet, and sing  Immanuel, God is with us; Sharing my humanness, my shame, feeling my  weakness, my pain, taking my punishment, my blame, Immanuel. And now my  words cannot explain, all that my heart cannot contain, how great are  the glories of Your Name, Immanuel' (Mission Praise, 221,326). 
25th December: Luke 2:1-20 
'A Saviour, who is Christ the Lord' (11). The Name, 'Jesus', means 'Saviour' (Matthew 1:21). Focus your thoughts on Him: The Lord Jesus Christ.  Here is a prayer to help you make your response to Him: 'Lord Jesus  Christ, You have come to us, You are one with us, Mary's Son. Cleansing  our souls from all their sin, pouring your love and goodness in; Jesus,  our love for You we sing, Living Lord. Lord Jesus Christ, You have come  to us, born as one of us, Mary's Son. Led out to die on Calvary, risen  from death to set us free, Living Lord Jesus, help us see You are Lord.  Lord Jesus Christ, we would come to You, live our lives for You, Son of  God. All Your commands we know are true, Your many gifts will make us  new, into our lives Your power breaks through, Living Lord' (Mission Praise, 435). 
26th December: Matthew 2:1-12 
'King  of the Jews' (2). Jesus came from the Jews. He came for 'all nations'  (28:19). He is the 'King of kings' (Revelation 17:14; 19:16). Here on  earth, we are learning 'to worship Him' (2). We are being prepared for  heavenly worship (Revelation 7:9-12): 'Kings and queens and beggarmen,  presidents and servants, the people of all nations, will gather on that  day. We will kneel before the King. None will be observers. We will lift  our voices. Together, we will say, "He is the King and He will reign  forever. He is the King and we will sing His praise. The King of kings  and Lord of lords forever, Jesus, He is the King. Hallelujah to the  King, He is our salvation. Master of the universe, King of all  creation"!' Let 'Jesus...take the highest honour'. Let us 'glorify the  King of kings' (Songs of Fellowship, 302, 590). 
27th December: John 19:17-20:10 
'It  is finished' (30). These are not words of despair. They are words of  triumph. At an early stage in His public ministry, Jesus said, 'My food  is to do the will of Him who sent Me to finish His work' (4:34). Even  then, He was looking ahead to the Cross, to the completion of the work  of redemption. In one sense, 'it is finished' - on the Cross. In another  sense, there is more to be done - by the Father. The Cross is followed  by the resurrection - 'God raised Him from the dead' (Acts 2:24; Romans  10:9). To come to the words, 'It is finished' is not to reach the end of  the story. Jesus was laid in the tomb (42). Still, this was not the end  of the story. Something else had to happen - 'Jesus had to rise from  the dead' (11). For our salvation, Jesus died 'and was raised to life'  (Romans 4:25). 
28th December: John 20:11-31 
Christ is 'the Lord' (2,18,20,25). Christ is 'my Lord' (13,28). Faith becomes real when Jesus comes to us. Here, we see  Jesus coming to Mary, the disciples and Thomas. Here, we see Mary, the  disciples and Thomas - changed by the power of the risen Christ. In  love, He comes to them, and they are changed. (a) Mary was 'weeping' (13,15). Jesus came to her, and she became a confident believer - 'I have seen the Lord!' (18). (b) The disciples were filled with 'fear'. Jesus came to them. He gave them His 'peace' and 'joy' (19-20). (c) Thomas found faith hard to come by (25). Jesus came to him, and he believed -  'My Lord and my God!' (28). Through the Gospel, we find faith: 'These  are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of  God, and that by believing you may have life in His Name' (31). 
29th December: Deuteronomy 33:18-34:12 
'The  eternal God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms'  (27): This is no guarantee of peaceful tranquillity. For Israel, there  was conflict. 'Saved by the Lord', Israel had found true happiness.  Still, there were 'enemies' to be 'thrust out' and 'trampled down'  (27,29). Knowing the blessing of God's salvation is no guarantee that  life will be easy. When the enemies of the Gospel see a believer intent  on glorifying the Lord, they do all they can to create problems. We have  'enemies' in 'high places' (29; Ephesians 6:12). Their argument is not  with us. It is with God. If God's work is to do well, there needs to be  spiritual leadership. Moses had led God's people in his day. Joshua was  to take his place (9). Moses was important. Joshua was important. The  Lord is more important - 'If God is for us, who can be against us?'  (Romans 8:31). 
30th December: John 21:1-25 
'Fishers  of men' (Matthew 4:19) - Set your goals lower than this, and you will  take others with you. Together, you will discover the emptiness of life  without Christ at its centre - 'they caught nothing' (3). Note the  contrast between the self-centered life (5) and the Christ centered life  (6,8,11). Loving, serving and following Jesus - These are the most  important things in life (15-17,22). Don't look over your shoulder at  someone else - 'Lord, what about this man?' (21). Let it be personal -  Jesus says, 'Do you love Me?' (15-17). He asked Peter, 'Do you  love me more than these?' (15) - more than you love these other  disciples, more than these other disciples love Me, more than your  boats, nets and fishes? Look back and ask yourself, 'Do I love Jesus  more than I did a year ago?'. 
31st December: Psalm 18:1-24
The first three verses set the tone: Worship. What a great start to this Psalm. Our attention is directed away from ourselves to the Lord: 'my strength...my rock, my fortress and my deliverer...my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold' (1-2). The great testimony of verse 3 - 'I call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised, and I am saved from my enemies' - did not come easily (4-5). The enemies of the Lord will be brought to judgment (13-14). 'The cord of death encompassed me...He delivered me from my strong enemy...' (4-5,17-19) - Rejoice in the risen Christ through whom we have the 'victory' over 'the last enemy...death' (1 Corinthians 15:20,26,54). God is leading us into 'a broad place' (19). Step into the future with Him. Don't hold back! 'Let go and let God have His wonderful way'.
The first three verses set the tone: Worship. What a great start to this Psalm. Our attention is directed away from ourselves to the Lord: 'my strength...my rock, my fortress and my deliverer...my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold' (1-2). The great testimony of verse 3 - 'I call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised, and I am saved from my enemies' - did not come easily (4-5). The enemies of the Lord will be brought to judgment (13-14). 'The cord of death encompassed me...He delivered me from my strong enemy...' (4-5,17-19) - Rejoice in the risen Christ through whom we have the 'victory' over 'the last enemy...death' (1 Corinthians 15:20,26,54). God is leading us into 'a broad place' (19). Step into the future with Him. Don't hold back! 'Let go and let God have His wonderful way'.
Comments
Post a Comment