Oh! Do I have a story for you…
We had a critical need yesterday. Right away it like to have knocked us down in shock! We began working to fix it our way. Within an hour the answer came in and we didn't have to be in charge. Isn’t that just like us
humans? …. If we had just waited it would not have cost us so much STRESS if only we had just took a step back, took a deep breath and left it to our SHEPHERD and RESTED in Him!
This morning I checked my email and this daily devotional was
sitting there waiting to SPEAK TO ME no doubt its message was for me. Maybe it will apply to what you are facing right now and you can avoid an incident like ours…..
Taken from "The Power of His
Presence"... by Ray Stedman... devotional@RayStedman.org:
NO
WANT
“The LORD is my
shepherd; I shall not be in want” (Psalm
23:1).
Because the Lord is my
shepherd, I do not lack anything. He satisfies my needs. That is the place
where God wants to bring us. He wants us to be independently dependent upon
Him, to need Him alone. It struck me as I was studying this psalm that there
are really only two options in life. If the Lord is my shepherd, then I shall
not want; but if I am in want, then it is obvious that the Lord is not my
shepherd. It is that simple. If emptiness, loneliness, despair, and frustration
exist in our lives, then the Lord is not our shepherd. Or if anyone or anything
else is shepherding us, we are never satisfied. If our vocation shepherds us,
then there is restlessness and feverish activity and frustration. If education
is our shepherd, then we are constantly being disillusioned. If another person
is our shepherd, we are always disappointed, and ultimately we are left empty.
If drug abuse is our shepherd, then “we are wasted,” as one rock artist said
recently. But if the Lord is our shepherd, David says, we shall not want.
It occurs to me that if
Jehovah is to be our shepherd, then we have to begin by recognizing that we are
sheep. I don't like that analogy, frankly, because I don't like sheep. I come
by my dislike honestly. I used to raise sheep. In high school I was in the 4-H
Club, and I had a herd of sheep and goats. Now goats I can abide, because they
may be obnoxious, but at least they're smart. Sheep are, beyond question, the
most stupid animals on the face of the earth. They are dumb and they are dirty
and they are timid and defenseless and helpless. Mine were always getting lost
and hurt and snake bitten. They literally do not know enough to come in out of
the rain. Sheep are miserable creatures.
And then to have God tell
me that I am one! That hurts my feelings. But if I am really honest with
myself, I know it is true. I know that I lack wisdom and strength. I'm inclined
to be self-destructive. Isaiah said it best: “We all, like sheep, have gone
astray; each of us has turned to his own way” (Isaiah 53:6). I know my tendency
toward self-indulgent individualism, going my own way and doing my own thing.
That's me. I'm a sheep. And if Jesus Christ is to be my shepherd, I have to
admit that I need one. It is difficult, but that is where we must start. Once
we admit that need, we discover the truth of what David is saying. We shall not
want.
Lord, though I am a sheep
who is prone to wander, come and be my shepherd today. Bring me to that place
where I can say, “The Lord is my shepherd I shall not be in want”
Life Application: If emptiness, loneliness, despair, frustration,
hopelessness, or wants exist in our lives, then the Lord is not our shepherd.
Can we recognize His call to rescue us?
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