Echoes From the Campfire

You feel the night wind. The darkness folds around you. You look up through the leaves to the dark-blue sky and shining stars. You smell the dry sand and the fresh water and the flowers and the spicy desert plants. Every breath you draw is new, untainted.”
                    –Zane Grey  (Wanderer of the Wasteland)

       “Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us. Selah”
                    –Psalm 62:8 (ESV)
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The comparison between Yahweh and false gods marks the last portion of Psalm 135.  Yahweh, God, rules over all the earth.  He is not a tribal deity, nor a mythical creature, nor a god made by human minds and hands.

          13 — Your name, O LORD, endures forever, your fame, O LORD, throughout all generations.
          14 — For the LORD will judge His people, and He will have compassion on His servants.
          15 — The idols of the nations are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands.
          16 — They have mouths, but they do not speak; eyes they have, but they do not see;
          17 — They have ears, but they do not hear; nor is there any breath in their mouths.
          18 — Those who make them are like them; so is everyone who trusts in them.
          19 — Bless the LORD, O house of Israel!  Bless the LORD, O house of Aaron!
          20 — Bless the LORD, O house of Levi!  You who fear the LORD, bless the LORD!
          21 — Blessed be the LORD out of Zion, who dwells in Jerusalem!  Praise the LORD!  (NKJV)

By blessing the Lord we are identifying Him as the source of all blessings and being grateful for all that He has given.  Compare that with the gods made by human minds and hands.  The God we serve is mighty and all-powerful for He created all things; yet He is also compassionate and loving–nothing can separate us from the love of God.  God is our secure foundation and we have nothing to fear with Him by our side–bless the Lord!
     His name, His character, endures forever!  Stephen Lawson proclaims, “His is forever the same, never diminishing, never changing.  His divine person is renowned through all generations, immutable and fixed.”  Compare that with dumb idols.  They tarnish, they become corrupt.  They cannot hear, but less speak and take action.   And get this truth–“they are lifeless, and those who make them will be like them, that is dead.” (Lawson)
     G. Campbell Morgan tells us, “The makers of idols become like that which they make–a man becomes like his god, approximates in character and conduct that to which he yields him homage.  The difference between true and false religion is that, in the former, worship is to the One who is forever greater than ourselves, and the others worship their creation, which is forever less than themselves.”  People today may not serve the image of Baal, Molech, or Ashtoreth.  They may not bow down to Zeus, Isis, or the vast pantheon of mythical gods.  But they serve gods they have made–the god of mammon, the god of technology, the god of consumerism.  Man, not the gods, build great and elaborate monoliths to these gods, but what good does is serve them.  In fact, because of the failure of the gods, many have proclaimed that there is no god, and for sure show themselves to be fools.
     The psalmist finishes with another call to worship and proclaim loudly in praise to the Lord of lords.  All believers should praise the Lord, if for no other reason, just because He is.  All who know and fear Him are called to praise Him.  Praise the God who is mighty over all creation, history, and the laws of nature.  We should be filled with praise for God at all times.  That is why Paul implores us to thank Him in every situation, to work for Him, to do all things for His glory and in His name.  Since God never changes, our worship should never change except possibly to get better and more intimate.  
     Stephen Lawson gives some ways to praise God.  First, praise Him fervently.  Our worship of God should be wholehearted.  “Lukewarmness is a tragic sin.  Our praise should be intense and passionate.”  Secondly, we are to praise God continually.  In good times and in the bad we should acknowledge our great God.  In troubles, tragedy, or in the great blessings that come our way, we should be praising Him.  Thirdly, we should praise God publicly.  That includes gathering with people in public places of worship, but also in our daily walk in the marketplace, the work place, the school, or just walking along the avenue.  Fourthly, our praise should ring forth privately.  In the quiet moment, alone with God we should be praising Him.  Finally, we should praise God intelligently.  “All worship is a response to who God is and what He has done.  The more truth we learn, the more we should worship Him.”

“Yes, Jesus is the Truth, the Way,               That leads you into rest,
Believe in Him without delay,
And you are fully blest.”

                       –J.H. Stockton

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Echoes From the Campfire

A man’s safety depended entirely upon his own vigilance and wisdom.”
                    –Charles A. Seltzer  (Square Deal Sanderson)

       “Getting wisdom is the wisest thing you can do! And whatever else you do, develop good judgment.”
                    –Proverbs 4:7 (NLT)
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          2.10 — When wisdom enters your heart, and knowledge is pleasant to your soul,
          2.11 — Discretion will preserve you; understanding will keep you.  (NKJV)

Notice the word “when”.  When wisdom enters…then discretion will preserve you and understanding will keep you.  The Amplified takes a slightly different light, “For skillful and godly Wisdom shall enter into your heart, and knowledge shall be pleasant to you.”  As does the CEB, “Wisdom will enter your mind, and knowledge will fill you with delight.”  This seems to indicate that it will happen instead of “when.”
     Bob Beasley says, “For the unregenerate person, the fearsome issue of life is protection.  That is one reason he seeks earthly wealth, desires job security, eats health foods, and the like, because he fears poverty, death, sickness, loss of love, loneliness, punishment, etc.  He seeks protection in fleeting things that never really protect him.”  Such a shame it is to live life in that manner.  Thanks be to God, we have Him as our Protector; we have a new heart, one that has been regenerated and is under the guidance and care of the Holy Spirit.
     The only way wisdom can enter your heart is when you follow His ways.  There must first be a changed heart, otherwise we know that the heart is deceitful.  In the verses that follow we see “the evil man” and “the strange woman,” therefore, wisdom located in the heart/mind is a prerequisite.  Matthew Henry says that, “If we are truly wise, it will appear by our care to avoid all evil company and evil practices.”  Wisdom, then must be internalized.  It is there to provide insight, to be learned intimately, and practiced in our daily living.
     Strong gives us some insight to this term we call “wisdom.”  The word, “chokmah” also means “skill” and can refer to ability in craftsmanship.  “True wisdom involves not only intelligence but also moral integrity.  Because a sinful lifestyle is ultimately self-destructive.”  We see then that to have wisdom is to live a skillful life.  A life that follows the Word of God and that is morally upright.  We need to be righteous and follow the good path.  Trapp says that true “spiritual joy mortifies sin.”  If we live in the fullness of the Spirit, follow His lead and take godly wisdom into our hearts and minds, then it will be very hard to deceive us.  We will find that sin to the heart after God is “tasteless fooleries.” (Trapp)
     Our heart/mind must be guided by the wisdom that God provides.  Charles Bridges tells us that, “Clear knowledge floating in the head is deep ignorance.  While it only glitters in the understanding, it is dry, speculative, and barren.”  There must be a new heart; one that has the light of God to filter wisdom and knowledge properly so that discretion will come and then it will be truly pleasant to the soul.
     God’s Word gives direction and understanding to the whole of life.  “It becomes not only an external rule, but a preserving, keeping principle.” (Bridges)  Paul warns us of the devices and snares of the devil; it is only when we travel this journey with godly discretion can we uncover those traps and find rest and peace along the way.  Our walk is secure if we walk warily and not just tip-toe through the tulips of life.  Francis Taylor says that men are subject to many dangers until they get Wisdom.  He includes: danger to reputation, danger to one’s good and estates through foolishness, danger to body and life by not heeding God’s principles, and there is danger to the soul of eternal misery.  Godly wisdom and understanding will therefore, keep us from the foolishness that comes our way and the intentions of evil that is along the way.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It’s never a pleasant thing to watch a man step off into eternity unprepared for the afterlife. To stand before his Just, and Holy Creator, defiant and unrepented.”

                    –Russell M. Chase  (Blessed Are the Peacemakers)

       “But you are not willing to come to Me that you may have life.”
                    –John 5:40 (NKJV)
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Amos now begins to give his prophecies through a series of visions.  The first is that of locusts.

          7.1 — Thus the Lord GOD showed me:  Behold, He formed locust swarms at the beginning of the late crop; indeed it was the late crop after the king’s mowings.
            .2 — And so it was, when they had finished eating the grass of the land, that I said:  “O Lord GOD, forgive, I pray!  Oh, that Jacob may stand, for he is small!”
            .3 — So the LORD relented concerning this.  “It shall not be,” said the LORD.  (NKJV)

After the king’s mowing, the first harvest was a tax, locusts would swarm devouring the rest of the harvest.  Amos realizes that “the locusts are not a fluke of nature, but are an act of divine judgment, the consequences of Israel’s sin.” (Peter C. Craigie)  God has a plan as He showed Jeremiah, “…Behold, I am fashioning a disaster and devising a plan against you.  Return now every one from his evil way and make your ways and your doings good.” (18:11, NKJV)  We sometimes get out of sorts when we see that God “fashions disaster.”  It would do us good to remember that when it does strike somewhere.  Perhaps a warning from God?
     Amos shows his humility and compassion as a prophet interceding on Israel’s behalf.  Gary G. Cohen says, “Amos’s reason for wanting a softer judgment upon Israel is his compassion for the weakness and frailty of his fellow Israelites.  He made no argument based upon their goodness or merits.  The answer to prayer was based wholly on God’s grace.”  In response to Amos’ interceding God stayed His decree.  “God loves to be entreated.  He delights to answer when He hears the cry of such as bear His needy people on their heart.” (H.A. Ironside)  We must keep God’s character–His attributes–in mind.  Albert Garner tells us, “This change was not in the mind of God, but in the outward effects.  God is unchangeable.  He does what is just, and responds to intercessory prayers.”
     This should be a grand lesson for us, showing the importance and power of intercessory prayer.  One never knows how it might touch God.  Amos was grieved over the plight and judgment that God pronounced upon Israel.  Seeing this vision, and Amos being a farmer, he was greatly concerned.  How much can we learn that when we are prompted to pray, either by the Holy Spirit or by what we see, we should do so for it very well could touch the heart of God.
     The second vision is that of fire.

          7.4 — Thus the Lord GOD showed me:  Behold, the Lord GOD called for conflict by fire, and it consumed the great deep and devoured the territory.
            .5 — Then I said:  “O Lord GOD, cease, I pray!  Oh, that Jacob may stand, for he is small!”
            .6 — So the LORD relented concerning this.  “This also shall not be,” said the Lord GOD.  (NKJV)

This is a deadly, intense fire that water cannot extinguish.  I am reminded of the fire that came down from heaven when Elijah confronted the priests of Baal.  The fire of God consumed the sacrifice, the altar, and the water.  The fields were dry and nothing would be able to stop the destruction brought about by the flames.  Again, Amos intercedes and the Lord hears and relents.
     The third vision is of the plumb-line.

          7.7 — Thus He showed me:  Behold the Lord stood on a wall made with a plumb line, with a plumb line in His hand.
            .8 — And the LORD said to me, “Amos, what do you see?”  And I said, “A plumb line.”  Then the Lord said:  “Behold, I am setting a plumb line in the midst of My people Israel; I will not pass by them anymore.
            . 9 — The high places of Isaac shall be desolate, and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste.  I will rise with the sword against the house of Jeroboam.”  (NKJV)

Here God is seen making careful and precise preparations for the coming punishments of Israel.  
     Ironside states that “God’s unerring word is such a plumb-line.  Unmistakably it tests every soul, manifesting every departure on the violator of it.”  God measures to see “how true the people are to the pattern of His Word, and if they are of upright character and conduct.” (Warren Wiersbe)  We should well understand that all of us will be judged by the Word of God.  
     “I will not pass by them anymore,” declares the Lord.  Nothing has changed, even with Amos’ intervention the people continue in their wicked ways.  Amos no longer prays for God to relent–enough is enough.  The evil and apathy and apostasy is too great.  Craigie states, “There comes a point of no return, Israel, in its dedicated pursuit of evil pushes Amos beyond the capacity to intercede and precipitates God into final commitment to judgment…  Judgment is the final result of mercy refused; it is invited by the persons judged.”
     Is the Lord devising a plan?  Yes, of course He is.  The day of the Lord’s judgment is close at hand and it is planned and will be precise in its carrying out.  But what about America, what about each individual?  If there is not repentance there is a plumb line being lowered, a precise plan of action being readied.  Today, now, is the day of salvation.  Maybe the Lord will relent.