Psalm 91:14-16 ” Because he loves Me, says the Lord, I will rescue him; I will protect him, for he acknowledges My Name. He will call upon Me, and I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble, I will deliver him and honor him. With long life will I satisfy him and show him My salvation.”

There is great hope and reassurance in the promises of God in this passage. He not only promises us that He will rescue, protect, and deliver us from the tribulations that come into our lives…but He promises He will be with us in the middle of them. Too often when affliction, pain, and distress attacks, our minds become dulled by exhaustion, depression, and stress. And as our world becomes smaller and smaller with each anguish-filled day, it can become very easy to view God as some far off Deity watching in disinterest. But it tells us here that it’s quite the opposite…God is slogging through all the tears, anxiety, and cries of desperation right alongside us…suffering as we suffer…His compassion and mercy flowing out of Him for us.

Matthew 6:25,27 ” Therefore I tell you don’t worry about your life…Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life?”

I don’t know about you, but I worry about the silliest things! Especially at night… I’ll lie there, my anxiety ever increasing as I stress over really stupid things…things that I have absolutely no control over, but I think I do. Does all my worrying change anything? No! Is worrying wrong? You bet it is! Philippians 6:6-7 tells us to not worry about anything. But even deeper, worrying shows my faltering faith and unbelief that God can take care of all the details in my life…both big and small. In Matthew 13, The Parable of the Sower, Jesus warns us about worrying when He said, “The one who received the seed that fell among the thorns is the man who hears the Word, but the worries of this life choke it out, making it unfruitful.” Worrying is a distraction…it takes my eyes off the Lord and onto the uncertainties of life of which I have no control over. So by not allowing myself to go down that path of anxious worry, I instead place my trust in God and the true One who can actually do something about it.

Titus 3:14 “Our people must learn to devote themselves to doing what is good…”

Developing Godly habits such as reading your Bible and praying are excellent things to do. But if you become too rigid in your scheduling of such things, God may throw a monkey wrench into your “sacred schedule” just to see what you’ll do. In other words, are you worshipping the habit or what the habit symbolizes? Say a close friend calls you very upset about a personal problem just as you’ve sat down with your Bible…do you change gears quickly, focusing on her with love, concern, and prayer…or do the unthinkable words come out of your mouth, “I can’t help you right now, it’s my quiet time with the Lord.” At that very moment, your habit has now become far more important than the hurting person God has placed across your path, and you are worshipping the habit rather than the reason to have the habit.

Romans 12:4 “Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.”

Paul uses here the illustration of our physical body and the Body of Christ – the Church – to show how through Jesus, we the Church Body are joined together, grow together, are held together, and are built up together. (Ephesians 4:16) I saw this on vivid display this morning as the ladies of our Church came together to study the Word. Just as our bodies are made up of not one part but of many…when the Body of Believers come together God can use each person’s gifts, talents, and passions to edify, encourage, exhort, and expound on the attributes of Jesus. What a joy it was to be part of… listening to the wisdom and sage advice from those whose walk with the Lord has been a rich, deep, and abiding journey.

Genesis 28:20 ” Then Jacob made a vow…”

Jacob’s journey of faith still had a long way to go. Earlier in this Chapter, God had made Himself known to Jacob, and in verses 13-15 God assured Jacob that he was in fact the promised carrier of both the seed and the Covenant of Abraham. God unconditionally vowed to Jacob his personal safety and blessing until Jacob would return to the Promised Land…but Jacob wanted to hedge his bets, so he bargained with God. Jacob’s vow here was entirely conditional. It was contingent on God holding up His end of the deal and subject to Jacob’s safe return…then and only then, Jacob would acknowledge God for Who He was, and his personal God. We can laugh at Jacob, but how many times have we ourselves “bargained” with God? “If You do this God, then will I do that.” is putting conditions on our faith and trust in God and not what He desires of us.

Matthew 13:25 “But while his men were sleeping, his enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat and went away.”

If you’ve ever had flower beds or a garden you know what’s it like to contend with the weeds. Everything looks beautiful, and suddenly, almost over night, your flower bed or garden has been over-run with weeds. They are vigorous, and thick…choking out the more desirable plants. And if you start weeding aggressively, you take the real chance of pulling the good plants out with the bad. In this Parable, the field is the whole world and what the enemy planted was called tares or darnel…another name for them is “False Wheat” or “Mimic Weed”. It’s a weed that looks very much like wheat until harvest-time when the differing seed heads are easily identifiable. Darnel, or False Wheat, will unfortunately contaminate the good wheat seed if they are harvested together. As Believers in this broken world, we need to be hypervigilant about allowing “weeds” to grow in our own life. Did you notice when the enemy came to sow the False Wheat? It was while the land owner’s men were sleeping. Any time we become apathetic, and indifferent to the “little weeds” we permit in our life…we’re setting ourselves up to wake up to these weeds choking out our relationship with the Lord.

Deuteronomy 6:5 “Love the Lord your God with all your heart…”

Jesus tells us in Luke 16:13 that, “No servant can serve two masters…” They will love one and hate the other…be devoted to one and despise the other., and this may go back and forth at will depending on the situation. Yes, living with a divided heart takes a lot of work, for most times it involves deceit and lying to people….starting with ourselves. Our heart isn’t designed to have multiple loves, it’s especially crafted to have one Master -God- to love, obey, and be entirely dependent upon Him only for protection and provision. That’s why when we try to worship both the world and God it doesn’t work out well. David in Psalm 86:11 asked God for an undivided heart…a heart solely devoted to Him. And that’s what we need to do also…ask God to give us singleheartedness of plan, purpose, and action in our life.

Psalm 88:18 ” You have taken my companions and loved ones from me; the darkness is my closest friend.”

Earlier in this Psalm the writer laments that, “You have taken from me my closest friends.” And this feeling of not only being abandoned by friends, but also by God is heard throughout this distressful Psalm. In fact, this is the only Psalm of lament that ends in a downcast note rather than in confidence and praise in the final verses. That’s because, when we rely on our feelings and emotions and not on God’s Word, it will leave us discouraged and hopeless every time. The Lord is our never fail friend. He is closer than a brother, (Proverbs 18:24) Who will always enjoy rather than refuse our presence. His friendship is fixed and stable, our relationship with Him never changing, steady and constant. We will lose beloved friends, but we will never lose the Lord’s Presence in our life.

II Corinthians 12:9 “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.”

Jacob built two altars. The first was when he was fleeing from his enraged brother, Esau. It was in Bethel after an encounter with the Lord…his first awareness of God’s plans for him, and the beginning of his journey of faith…but God was yet the God of his Fathers and not his. The second altar was built 20 long years later when the Lord brought him back to the Promised Land. During those 20 years Jacob met his match in craftiness in his Father-in-law, he struggled with contentious and jealous wives, and he wrestled with God’s plan and purpose for his life. But in the end, when he encountered God again, Jacob was a changed man…and God so renamed him – Israel. For over the course of those 20 years Jacob, or now Israel, grew spiritually in his dependance and obedience to God. And so the second altar in Canaan he aptly named, “God, the God of Israel.” …for God was now his God.

Call your Mother today.

We had a casual poll going this morning at Church of what Mothers really wanted from their children today. Overwhelmingly, it was to either spend time with them, or to have a telephone call wishing them a Happy Mother’s Day. Just to be remembered is a big thing…this point seen in Proverbs 23:22, when it tells us, “Listen to your father, who gave you life, and do not despise your mother when she is old.” The word despise here not meaning to scorn, but merely to disregard. So today, call your Mother, send a text, or message her to let her know she’s remembered.