Flourishing
/0 Comments/in For Pastors, Preachers, Bible Teachers/by David GuzikDear Pastor, Preacher, or Bible Teacher –
You made it through another weekend of serving God, His people, and a world that needs Jesus so much! Here’s a brief word from Psalm 52 that might just encourage you today.
Psalm 52 carries a lot of pain. David was outraged when a wicked man massacred innocent priests. Given the burden this psalm bears, it’s wonderful to see this toward the end of Psalm 52:
But I am like a green olive tree in the house of God;
I trust in the mercy of God forever and ever. (Psalm 52:8)
Most of us won’t experience the same kind of violent crisis that prompted this psalm, but we have our own burdens and wounds. There are more than a few pains to carry when you give yourself to serve God, His people, and a needy world. No matter what weight you’re under, this is for you to say in the name of the God you serve:
I am like a green olive tree in the house of God; I trust in the mercy of God.
The traumatic events David responded to happened at the tabernacle (1 Samuel 21:1-7). Maybe when David was there, he saw a healthy green olive tree that was even more blessed because of where it was planted (in the house of God).
David said, “No matter what I’ve been through, I’m going to be like that green olive tree. I’m going to flourish as I trust in the mercy of God, and God helping me I do so forever and ever.”
All the wicked and those who set themselves against God’s work will one day pass and perish. Be encouraged that by God’s mercies, you can be like the green olive tree in the house of God – flourishing, growing, fruitful, life-giving, vibrant.
Ask God for this mercy today – and walk in it forever and ever.
Blessings to you in Jesus’ Name – David Guzik
Click Here to Receive Email from David for Pastors, Preachers, and Bible Teachers
Leaving a Successful Season
/0 Comments/in Weekly Devotional/by David GuzikNow an angel of the Lord spoke to Philip, saying, “Arise and go toward the south along the road which goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.” This is desert. So he arose and went. (Acts 8:26-27a)
There’s nothing like a season where God moves in power. There is a real sense of God’s presence and effective working day to day, and sometimes hour to hour. Some people call such seasons “revival” or “spiritual awakening,” but whatever one calls them, they are wonderful.
Acts 8 describes just such a season in Samaria, a city in the region in between Judea and Galilee. One description of it is in Acts 8:6: And the multitudes with one accord heeded the things spoken by Philip, hearing and seeing the miracles which he did. Acts 8:8 simply says, there was great joy in that city.
In such wonderful seasons of God’s work, He uses people like you and me. Philip was just such a man used by God in Samaria. He saw this outpouring of God’s Spirit and experienced the miraculous first-hand.
That’s why it seems striking when angel of the Lord told him to move on to another place. Through this angel of the Lord God told Philip to arise, and go toward the south.
I wonder if Philip first thought this was bad news. “Leave this amazing work God is doing in Samaria? I don’t want to do that. Why can’t I stay here much longer and be part of it all?”
I wonder if the new Christians in Samaria thought this was bad news. “Philip can’t leave us. God has used him so mightily. How can the work of God go on if Philip leaves?”
I wonder if it was even stranger because of where God told Philip to go: this is desert. If I heard a call to leave such a blessed, fruitful ministry and go to a desolate place, I might think it was the devil speaking and not the Lord. It seems foolish to leave a place of prospering ministry and to go a desert road.
If it were me, I might think, “Not now” or “Not me” or “Not there.” Leaving fruitful ministry to go to a desert is crazy from man’s perspective, but it is wise if God directs it.
That’s why I love the words that begin Acts 8:27: So he arose and went. Philip loved God more than he loved the success of God’s work. I’m sure he was a bit sad to leave and was uncertain about what God had in front of him. But God was leading, and Philip followed. Good things were going to happen.
The work in Samaria continued just as God wanted it to. God’s workmen change, but God’s work goes on.
Dear friend, stay close to Jesus. Enjoy seasons of great fruit and blessing, but don’t make an idol of them. God will be with you where He leads you – as Philip was about to find out.