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I love the Psalms

~ Connecting daily with God through the Psalms

I love the Psalms

Tag Archives: slave

Living the Crucified Life

07 Sunday Dec 2025

Posted by davidkitz in The Elisha Code

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

concentration camp, Corrie ten Boom, England, faith, forgiveness, Gestapo, Jesus, John Newton, Nazi Germany, Nazi soldiers, parliament, slave, slavery, Wilberforce

I have been crucified with Christ;
it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me;
 and the life which I now live in the flesh 
I live by faith in the Son of God, 
who loved me and gave Himself for me.
(Galatians 2:20, NKJV)

The Elisha Code is all about dying to self and living for Christ. Christ is the second Adam—the new man who fully bears the image of God. In Eden, the tempter succeeded in marring the image of God that was so beautifully evident in Adam and Eve before the fall. Sin robs and defiles. Jesus redeems and restores.

Art by Hult –www.biblicalarchaeology.org

Two people who lived the crucified life were William Wilberforce and Corrie ten Boom. Both fought hatred and the dehumanizing forces of slavery and racism. Their most powerful weapon was relentless love. Today, those who embrace the Christ of the cross are called to do the same.

Abraham Lincoln once said that every school child should know about William Wilberforce.[i] For twenty long years from 1787 to 1807, Wilberforce persistently campaigned for the abolition of the slave trade. It was incredibly painful and often deeply discouraging work.

What kept him from giving up as he faced defeat after defeat? Wilberforce had previously lived a self-indulgent life as a very wealthy upper-class Englishman. What motivated him to stop wasting his life in drinking, gambling, and endless parties? He was a popular Member of Parliament who wowed crowds with his remarkable singing and wit. Prime Minister William Pitt said that Wilberforce had the greatest natural eloquence of all the men he had ever known.[ii] What caused him to choose the unpopular path of putting principle above politics, and conscience over ambition?

With the death of Wilberforce’s father at just age 40, William’s comfortable world was radically shaken. At the age of eight, because of his mother’s serious illness, he was shipped off to his Uncle William and Aunt Hannah in Wimbledon. Unbeknownst to his mother, he was mentored by Rev. John Newton, the former slave-ship captain and author of the song Amazing Grace. Some trace Wilberforce’s hatred of slavery back to this earliest encounter.

When Wilberforce’s wealthy grandfather got wind of his new spirituality, he threatened to disinherit him. So, Wilberforce’s mother promptly rescued him and did her best to cure him through endless parties and upper-class distractions. For a while, the cure was effective. After his grandfather’s death, Wilberforce inherited the family fortune which funded his election as an 18-year-old English member of parliament.

While spending the winter at the fashionable French and Italian Rivieras, he was suddenly called back to London in support of William Pitt’s Parliamentary Reform Bill. While crossing the Swiss Alps, Wilberforce read The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul by Philip Doddridge. Both Doddridge and John Wesley were instrumental in reintroducing the forgotten teachings of Richard Baxter about self-examination, solitude, devotions, and diligence.[iii]

In discussing Doddridge’s book with his former tutor Isaac Milner, Wilberforce’s life was radically changed. He rediscovered his childhood faith at an adult level. Wilberforce, with Milner’s assistance, began reading the Bible in the original Greek. He wanted to find out for himself what the Christian faith was truly about. He discovered that it was not about a system of gloomy prohibitions. True faith is about peace, hope, and joy. When Wilberforce fell in love with Jesus, he also fell in love with God’s creation.

Rather than drop out of politics as he was tempted to do, Wilberforce turned his new-found faith into practical action. Prime Minister Pitt wrote him, saying: “Surely the principles as well as the practice of Christianity are simple, and lead not to meditation only but to action.”

Reconnecting with his old mentor, the converted slave-ship captain, John Newton, Wilberforce realized that God could use him to end the slave trade: “God almighty has set before me two great objects: the suppression of the Slave Trade and the reformation of manners.”

Eighteenth-century England was rife with epidemic alcohol abuse, child prostitution, child labor, and animal exploitation. There were over 14,000 slaves in England alone, but hundreds of thousands more in the rich Caribbean English colonies where it was out of sight and out of mind.[iv] The future King of England George IV was famous for his immorality and gambling debts, keeping lockets of hair from all 7,000 women that he had seduced.[v] The King and his royal brothers dismissed abolitionists like Wilberforce as fanatics and hypocrites.[vi]

Because England was the foremost slave-trading nation on earth, it was initially unthinkable for them to give it up. As one merchant accurately put it, the African slave trade was “the foundation of our commerce…the life of our navigation, and first cause of our national industry and riches.”[vii]

Eighty per cent of overseas British income came from the Caribbean slave plantations.[viii] Wilberforce was naively asking England to commit commercial suicide. In Bristol, after the initial defeat of Wilberforce’s bill, bells were rung, a bonfire was lit, and a half-day holiday was awarded to sailors and workers.[ix] The passion for profit and slave-produced sugar had killed their conscience.

While fighting the slave trade, Wilberforce also invested in improving the life of England’s poor, giving one quarter of his income, representing the equivalent of $300,000 away each year. He started cancer hospitals, eye clinics and many faith-based schools for the poor.[x]

William Willberforce portrait (John Russell)

The slave trade was abolished in 1807; however, the slaves were not liberated until just before Wilberforce’s death. On July 31st, 1834, 800,000 Afro-Caribbeans were set free. While moving a motion for abolition, Wilberforce said, “Africa! Africa! Your sufferings have been the theme that has arrested and engages my heart – your sufferings no tongue can express; no language impart.”[xi]

In the 1940’s, Corrie ten Boom also learned to act on her strong faith. The Nazis conquered the Netherlands in May 1940, and during the German occupation 100,000 Dutch Jews were sent to concentration camps. Corrie prayed, “Lord Jesus, I offer myself for your people. In any way. Any place. Any time.”[xii]

By disguising themselves as Nazi soldiers, her underground team saved 100 Jewish babies from being killed in an orphanage.

A well-known architect built them a secret two-and-a-half foot-wide hiding place behind a new brick wall in Corrie’s bedroom.[xiii] Even after arresting the ten Booms, the Gestapo were never able to find the Jews hidden in this ‘angel-crib’ hiding place.[xiv]

At the time of the arrest, Corrie’s interrogator painfully slapped her in the face after every question. Corrie cried out: “Lord Jesus, protect me!”

He hissed at her, “If you mention that name again once more, I will kill you.”

But miraculously, he stopped beating her.[xv]

Corrie and her sister Betsie hid over 800 Jewish people in their Haarlem watchmaker home, before being sent to Ravensbruck Concentration Camp in eastern Germany where 96,000 women died. “The sufferings of Jesus,” said Corrie, “became very real to me at Ravensbruck.”[xvi]

She lost four family members in the concentration camps, including her beloved older sister Betsie who forgave and prayed for the guards even as they mercilessly beat her.

Photo by RODNAE Productions on Pexels.com

“Don’t hate,” Betsie pleaded to Corrie. Three days before Betsie died, she shared with Corrie the vision of opening healing homes in Holland and Germany, before going around the world sharing about Jesus’ love and forgiveness. Two weeks later, Corrie was set free through a God-ordained clerical error.[xvii] One week after this, all the other women her age at Ravensbruck were taken to be killed in the gas chamber.

Upon returning to Holland, Corrie opened a home in Holland to bring healing for people, even including the ostracized Dutch collaborators. She was knighted by the Queen of the Netherlands for her work.
Corrie told God that she was willing to go where he wanted her to go but hoped that he would never send her back to Germany. Finally, after sensing a blockage in her prayer life, she repented, saying, “Yes, Lord, I’ll go to Germany too.”[xviii]

God sent her back to Ravensbruck to lead Bible studies with former guards, now in that prison. Then, she rented and cleaned up a former concentration camp in Germany to bring temporary housing and healing to some of the nine million Germans who had been bombed or driven out of their homes.[xix]

In 1946, a former Ravensbruck guard said to Corrie in Munich, “How grateful I am for your message, Fraulein. To think, as you said, that he washes my sins away!”

Corrie later wrote, “His hand was thrust out to shake mine… Even as angry, vengeful thoughts boiled through me, I saw the sin of them. Jesus Christ had died for this man. Was I going to ask for more? Lord Jesus, I prayed, forgive me and help me to forgive him… Again, I silently prayed ‘Jesus, I cannot forgive him. Give me your forgiveness.’ As I took his hand, my heart felt an overwhelming love for this stranger.”[xx

Corrie became a penniless tramp for the Lord, travelling for three decades to sixty-two countries, and sleeping in over a thousand different beds.[xxi] Wherever she went globally, Corrie shared from her Ravensbruck experience that the light and love of Jesus Christ is deeper than the deepest darkness. She was the favorite travelling companion of the Bible-smuggler Brother Andrew as they both did missionary work behind the Iron Curtain, in Vietnam and twelve other Communist countries. In Vietnam, they gave her the honorific title of “Double-old Grandmother.”

While in the Soviet Union, she intentionally preached the gospel in her hotel room, knowing that everything she said was being listened to and recorded by communist officials.

Through her deep friendship with Rev. Billy and Ruth Graham, Corrie’s The Hiding Place book was turned into a movie reaching tens of millions. Ruth Graham said: “I didn’t know anyone who had suffered so intensely for the Lord and for his people, as Corrie had, and come through with absolutely nothing but love in her heart for her captors—she forgave them.”[xxii]

In 1967, Corrie was recognized by Israel as a righteous Gentile, with the planting of a tree in her honor.[xxiii] When people kept telling her how brave she was, Corrie transparently prayed, “What little courage I have… I was not brave. I was often like a timid, fluttering bird, looking for a hiding place… Lord, I am weak and cowardly and of little faith; do hold me close. Thou art the conqueror. May that assurance give me courage and loyalty.”[xxiv]

Because of her work blessing indigenous people, Corrie was adopted into the Hopi First Nation and given the name Beautiful Flower.[xxv] While staying at a Kansas farm, Corrie challenged her host who had recently kicked his son out, telling him to never darken his doorstep again. She said to the farmer: “If you believe in Jesus Christ and belong to Him, your sins have been cast into the depths of the sea, and that’s very deep. But then he expects also that you forgive the sins of your boy and cast them into the depths of the sea. Just imagine how you would feel if there should be another war, if your son had to go back into service and was killed in action. Don’t you think you should forgive him right now?”

After riding together in silence, the farmer invited Corrie to go with him as he asked his son to forgive him. His son replied, “But, Father. I should ask you for forgiveness.”[xxvi]

In her late sixties, Corrie was betrayed and hurt by some Christians she loved and trusted: “You would have thought that having been able to forgive the guards in Ravensbruck, forgiving Christian friends would be child’s play. It wasn’t. For weeks, I seethed inside. But at last, I asked God again to work His miracle in me… I was restored to the Father.”

She later burnt the painful letters from her friends, as a sign of letting go.[xxvii] She, like Wilberforce, lived the crucified life. Unlike Adam and Eve, Wilberforce and ten Boom did not run from God. They found their hiding place in God (Psalm 32:7). In tumultuous times, they courageously fought against forms of racism that mar and debase the image of God that we all bear.

So God created mankind in his own image,
in the image of God he created them;
male and female he created them.
(Genesis 1:27, NIV)

This is the thirteenth weekly excerpt from the award-winning book 
The Elisha Code & the Coming Revival 

A soul-gripping read.
Is a return-to-Jesus revival possible in our time?
This book points the way forward.
For details click here.

[i] Lincoln on abolition in England and the United States, 1858 | Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History (accessed April 13th 2023).

[ii] Eric Metaxas, Amazing Grace (Harper Collins Publishers, New York, NY, 2007), 41.

[iii] William Hague, William Wilberforce: the Life of the Great Anti-Slave Trade Campaigner, (HarperCollins Publishers, London, UK, 2007), 74.

[iv] Metaxas, Amazing Grace, 94.

[v] Metaxas, 72.

[vi] Metaxas, 158.

[vii] Hague, 119.

[viii] Hague, 119.

[ix] Hague, 225.

[x] Hague, 221.

[xi] Metaxas, 151.

[xii] Corrie ten Boom, The Hiding Place (Chosen Books, Bantam Books, Fleming H Revell, New York, New York, 1971), 114.

[xiii] Ten Boom, The Hiding Place, 120.

[xiv] Corrie ten Boom, A Prisoner—and Yet (Christian Literature Crusade, London, UK, 1954), 12.

[xv] Ten Boom, A Prisoner—and Yet, 13.

[xvi] Ten Boom, A Prisoner—and Yet, 87.

[xvii] Ten Boom, The Hiding Place, 241

[xviii] Corrie ten Boom, Amazing Love, (Christian Literature Crusade, London, UK, 1954), p. 27.

[xix] Ten Boom, Amazing Love, 36.

[xx] Ten Boom The Hiding Place, 238.

[xxi] Corrie ten Boom & Jamie Buckingham, Tramp for the Lord (BBS Publishing Company, New York, 1975, 1995), 185.

[xxii] Corrie Ten Boom “The Lives She Touched” video Ruth Graham: “When I met Corrie, the thing that really impressed me was the twinkle in her eye. There was nothing but love and forgiveness.”

[xxiii] Ten Boom, The Hiding Place, 138.

[xxiv] Ten Boom, A Prisoner— and Yet, 129.

[xxv] Corrie ten Boom “The Lives She Touched” video.

[xxvi] Ten Boom, Amazing Love, 10.

[xxvii] Ten Boom & Buckingham, Tramp for the Lord, 310.

The Son Sets You Free

24 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by davidkitz in Psalm 142

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

free, freedom, imprisonment, Jesus, negative habits, Prayer, Psalms, slave, victory

Today’s quote and prayer from
“Psalms 365: Develop a Life of Worship and Prayer”
by David Kitz.Psalm 142_5

Reading: Psalm 142:5-7

Sovereign LORD,
 set me free from the negative habits
and thought patterns that imprison me.
Help me identify them one by one,
and then help me gain the victory over them
in the power of Jesus.

Amen.

Now a slave has no permanent place
in the family,
but a son belongs to it forever.

So if the Son sets you free,
you will be free indeed.
(John 8:35-36), NIV)*

* NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, COPYRIGHT ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 BY BIBLICA

BGBG_v4.3_150[1818]

Please pray for peace to return to Israel, Gaza, and Ukraine!

Volume I of Psalms 365: Develop a Life of Worship and Prayer won the Best Book of the Year Award from The Word Guild and Volume II has won the Best Devotional of the Year Award. For those who love God’s word, this three-book series is an ideal way to daily meet with the Lord. To purchase or for a closer look click here.TheElishaCodeCVR5

To purchase or for a closer look click here.

Great Good from Negative Experiences

18 Thursday Feb 2021

Posted by davidkitz in Psalm 105, Psalms

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Joseph, redemptive, salvation, slave, trusting God

Reading: Psalm 105
(Verses 16-22)
He called down famine on the land
and destroyed all their supplies of food;
and he sent a man before them—
Joseph, sold as a slave.
They bruised his feet with shackles,
his neck was put in irons,
till what he foretold came to pass,
till the word of the L
ORD proved him true.
The king sent and released him,
the ruler of peoples set him free.
He made him master of his household,
ruler over all he possessed,
to instruct his princes as he pleased
and teach his elders wisdom
(NIV).*

img_20210204_1457314

Snow & ice formations — photo by David Kitz

Reflection
Here is a question for you. Is bad news always bad news, or is it good news in disguise?

Sometimes what initially appears to be a very bad change of circumstances can over time turn out for the better. The story of the patriarch, Joseph, illustrates this truth perfectly. No one would be foolish enough to call Joseph’s betrayal by his brothers a good news event. Being sold as a foreign slave in Egypt was in many respects a death sentence. How could something good or meaningful come from the life of an obscure young slave?

But that obscure young slave rose above his circumstances and changed the course of nations. His faith and actions more than three millennia ago still have ramifications for us today. How would Egypt have survived seven years of famine without the foresight and wisdom of Joseph? Would there be a Jewish nation today without the guiding hand of Joseph, who was strategically positioned at such a critical time in history?

What began as a bad news story, turned into the salvation of a nation. Joseph told his brothers, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives” (Genesis 50:20).

Sometimes I wonder what thoughts, hopes and dreams sustained Joseph during his darkest hours. God most certainly was with him. He did not go down to Egypt alone. When we receive bad news, is it always genuinely bad? If God is with us in the hard times, great good may yet come from our most negative experiences. He is a redemptive God who turns darkness to light, mourning to gladness, and curses into blessings. Keep these thoughts in mind during the hardships of this current pandemic. Surely, this is why St. Paul admonishes us with these words: give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

Response: Father God, when bad news comes give me a thankful heart and a right perspective. Your ways are higher than mine. You know the end before the beginning starts. I choose to trust you. Amen.

Your Turn: Over time has the Lord turned bad news into good news for you? How did that make you feel?

* New International Version, Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica

The first volume of Psalms 365: Develop a Life of Worship and Prayer by award-winning author David Kitz is now available. For a closer look at this 262-page daily devotional book click here.

Looking to the Hand of the Master

12 Thursday Dec 2019

Posted by davidkitz in Devotionals, Psalm 123, Psalms

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

looking to God, master, mercy, servant, slave

Reading: Psalm 123
A song of ascents.
I lift up my eyes to you,
to you who sit enthroned in heaven.
As the eyes of slaves look to the hand of their master,
as the eyes of a female slave look to the hand of her mistress,
so our eyes look to the L
ORD our God,
till he shows us his mercy.
Have mercy on us, LORD, have mercy on us,
for we have endured no end of contempt.
We have endured no end
of ridicule from the arrogant,
of contempt from the proud
(NIV).

photo of person s open hands

Photo by Luis Quintero on Pexels.com

Reflection
Like every parent, I have had moments when I have needed to correct my children. In my professional life as a teacher, correcting a child’s behavior was a daily, sometimes minute-to-minute occurrence. In such situations eye contact is crucial. If the child does not make eye contact with you, you are wasting your breath. Your advice—your admonition—your warning—is going nowhere. You might as well speak to the wind. But in such situations, it is essential that you speak to the heart of the child.

The eyes are the window of the heart. When someone is avoiding eye contact, in reality they are hiding their heart. They are closing their heart to you.

Of course the same principle is true when we consider our relationship with God. We need to make eye contact with the LORD. That’s why there is something truly intimate about this psalm. It’s all about making eye contact with God. It’s about opening your heart to the LORD and exposing what is deep inside you. You are showing when you lift your eyes to Him that you are ready to receive instruction. Yes, and correction too, if that is needed.

So the psalmist speaks these words: I lift up my eyes to you, to you who sit enthroned in heaven. He takes the position and the posture of a slave—a humble servant. He is looking for mercy—hoping for grace and blessing from the hand of His master.

This is perhaps the most intimate of the Songs of Ascent. Having come a great distance, the pilgrim is now in the LORD’s house. He has drawn nigh in the fullest sense. The pilgrim lifts his eyes—not to an idol, but to the LORD—the One who fills all, formed all, and transcends all. With eyes wide open he exposes his heart to God. He waits expectantly for the LORD’s instruction.

Prayer at its best is modeled for us in this psalm. It’s prayer with our eyes and our ears wide open to God. We are looking to Him for mercy, comfort, strength and direction.

Response: Father God, I come before you now. I lift up my eyes to you, to you who sit enthroned in heaven. Be merciful to me. Speak to me. Correct me, if I need correction. Give me direction. I am ready to receive instruction from you. I am your servant. Amen.

Your Turn: Are you drawing nigh to God? How do you make eye contact with the Lord?

Will Sin Rule Over Me?

29 Friday Nov 2019

Posted by davidkitz in Devotionals, Psalm 119, Psalms

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

liberty, master, Psalm 119, Savior, slave, slavery

Reading: Psalm 119
פ Pe
(Verses 129-136)
Your statutes are wonderful;
therefore I obey them.
The unfolding of your words gives light;
it gives understanding to the simple.
I open my mouth and pant,
longing for your commands.
Turn to me and have mercy on me,
as you always do to those who love your name.
Direct my footsteps according to your word;
let no sin rule over me.
Redeem me from human oppression,
that I may obey your precepts.
Make your face shine on your servant
and teach me your decrees.
 Streams of tears flow from my eyes,
for your law is not obeyed
(NIV).

close up photo of woman with her hands tied with rope

Photo by Engin Akyurt on Pexels.com

Reflection
Slavery is distasteful. Distasteful is a rather mild term. Let’s call it what it is—an abomination. It’s difficult these days to find someone who is in favor of slavery. We all seem to be in favor of personal liberty. But are we?

While trumpeting our personal liberty, are we letting ourselves become shackled by crippling habits? We seem quite willing—maybe even eager—to let sin enslave us.

James, the brother of our Lord, provides us with this warning: When tempted, no one should say, “God is tempting me.” For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone; but each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death (James 1:13-15).

Clearly sin has consequences. Yielding to temptations takes us down a dark path. We may think we are in control, but before long we discover we have a new master. Our sinful nature takes over. Evil desires are in control. If we persist in that pattern of behavior, the end result is a seared conscious and death.

We need a Savior to set us free. The psalmist expresses that earnest desire: Turn to me and have mercy on me, as you always do to those who love your name. Direct my footsteps according to your word; let no sin rule over me.

Is that your prayer and the desire of your heart?

Response: Father God, I need you to liberate me from every stronghold of sin. Establish within me a clean heart. Help my thoughts and actions to be pure. Lord Jesus, be my master. Amen.

Your Turn: Have you yielded control to sinful habits? Take some time to go to the cross of Jesus.

Are You Free or a Slave?

06 Friday Jul 2018

Posted by davidkitz in Bible, Devotionals, God's word, Psalm 119, Psalms

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

liberty, Savior, sin, sinful nature, slave, slavery, temptations

Reading: Psalm 119
פ Pe
(Verses 129-136)
Your statutes are wonderful;
therefore I obey them.
The unfolding of your words gives light;
it gives understanding to the simple.
I open my mouth and pant,
longing for your commands.
Turn to me and have mercy on me,
as you always do to those who love your name.
Direct my footsteps according to your word;
let no sin rule over me.
Redeem me from human oppression,
that I may obey your precepts.
Make your face shine on your servant
and teach me your decrees.
 Streams of tears flow from my eyes,
for your law is not obeyed
(NIV).

2018-05-17a

Elk grazing along Policeman Creek, Canmore, Alberta — photo by David Kitz

Reflection
Slavery is distasteful. Distasteful is a rather mild term. Let’s call it what it is—an abomination. It’s difficult these days to find someone who is in favor of slavery. We all seem to be in favor of personal liberty. But are we? 

While trumpeting our personal liberty, are we letting ourselves become shackled by crippling habits? We seem quite willing—maybe even eager—to let sin enslave us.

James, the brother of our Lord, provides us with this warning: When tempted, no one should say, “God is tempting me.” For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone; but each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death (James 1:13-15).

Clearly sin has consequences. Yielding to temptations takes us down a dark path. We may think we are in control, but before long we discover we have a new master. Our sinful nature takes over. Evil desires are in control. If we persist in that pattern of behavior, the end result is a seared conscious and death.

We need a Savior to set us free. The psalmist expresses that earnest desire: Turn to me and have mercy on me, as you always do to those who love your name. Direct my footsteps according to your word; let no sin rule over me. 

Is that your prayer and the desire of your heart?

Response: Father God, I need you to liberate me from every stronghold of sin. Establish within me a clean heart. Help my thoughts and actions to be pure. Lord Jesus, be my master. Amen.

Your Turn: Have you yielded control to sinful habits? Take some time to go to the cross of Jesus.

Is Bad News Good News in Disguise?

26 Thursday Apr 2018

Posted by davidkitz in Bible, Devotionals, Psalm 105, Psalms

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

bad news, Egypt, famine, good news, Jewish, Joseph, redemptive, salvation, slave, slavery, St. Paul, thankful

Reading:                                   Psalm 105                                                                 

 (Verses 16-22)
He called down famine on the land
and destroyed all their supplies of food;
and he sent a man before them—
Joseph, sold as a slave.
They bruised his feet with shackles,
his neck was put in irons,
till what he foretold came to pass,
till the word of the L
ORD proved him true.
The king sent and released him,
the ruler of peoples set him free.
He made him master of his household,
ruler over all he possessed,
to instruct his princes as he pleased
and teach his elders wisdom
(NIV).

Reflection
Here is a question for you. Is bad news always bad news, or is it good news in disguise?

IMG_20180402_113556 (2)

Barbwire horizon — photo by David Kitz

Sometimes what initially appears to be a very bad change of circumstances can over time turn out for the better. The story of the patriarch, Joseph, illustrates this truth perfectly. No one would be foolish enough to call Joseph’s betrayal by his brothers a good news event. Being sold as a foreign slave in Egypt was in many respects a death sentence. How could something good or meaningful come from the life of an obscure young slave?

But that obscure young slave rose above his circumstances and changed the course of nations. His faith and actions more than three millennia ago still have ramifications for us today. How would Egypt have survived seven years of famine without the foresight and wisdom of Joseph? Would there be a Jewish nation today without the guiding hand of Joseph, who was strategically positioned at such a critical time in history?

What began as a bad news story, turned into the salvation of a nation. Joseph told his brothers, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives” (Genesis 50:20).

Sometimes I wonder what thoughts, hopes and dreams sustained Joseph during his darkest hours. God most certainly was with him. He did not go down to Egypt alone. When we receive bad news, is it always genuinely bad? If God is with us in the hard times, great good may yet come from our most negative experiences. He is a redemptive God who turns darkness to light, mourning to gladness, and curses into blessings. Surely, this is why St. Paul admonishes us with these words: give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

Response: Father God, when bad news comes give me a thankful heart and a right perspective. Your ways are higher than mine. You know the end before the beginning starts. I choose to trust you. Amen.

Your Turn: Over time has the Lord turned bad news into good news for you?

Bad News?

03 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by davidkitz in Psalm 105, Psalms

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

bad news, circumstances, Egypt, give thanks, good news, Joseph, Old Orchard Beach, slave, slavery, the LORD

Reading:                                        Psalm 105                                                                 

 (Verses 16-22)

He called down famine on the land
and destroyed all their supplies of food;
and he sent a man before them—
Joseph, sold as a slave.
They bruised his feet with shackles,
his neck was put in irons,
till what he foretold came to pass,
till the word of the L
ORD proved him true.
The king sent and released him,
the ruler of peoples set him free.
He made him master of his household,
ruler over all he possessed,
to instruct his princes as he pleased
and teach his elders wisdom
(NIV).

Reflection

Here is a question for you. Is bad news always bad news, or is it good news in disguise?

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Old Orchard Beach, ME — photo by David Kitz

Sometimes what initially appears to be a very bad change of circumstances can over time turn out for the better. The story of the patriarch, Joseph, illustrates this truth perfectly. No one would be foolish enough to call Joseph’s betrayal by his brothers a good news event. Being sold as a foreign slave in Egypt was in many respects a death sentence. How could something good or meaningful come from the life of an obscure young slave?

But that obscure young slave rose above his circumstances and changed the course of nations. His faith and actions more than three millennia ago still have ramifications for us today. How would Egypt have survived seven years of famine without the foresight and wisdom of Joseph? Would there be a Jewish nation today without the guiding hand of Joseph, who was strategically positioned at such a critical time in history?

What began as a bad news story, turned into the salvation of a nation. Joseph told his brothers, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives” (Genesis 50:20).

Sometimes I wonder what thoughts, hopes and dreams sustained Joseph during his darkest hours. God most certainly was with him. He did not go down to Egypt alone. When we receive bad news, is it always genuinely bad? If God is with us in the hard times, great good may yet come from our most negative experiences. He is a redemptive God who turns darkness to light, mourning to gladness, and curses into blessings. Surely, this is why St. Paul admonishes us with these words: give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

Response: Father God, when bad news comes give me a thankful heart and a right perspective. Your ways are higher than mine. You know the end before the beginning starts. I choose to trust you. Amen.

Your Turn: Over time has the Lord turned bad news into good news for you?

Psalms 365: Develop a Life of Worship and Prayer

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