This Morning's Entry
I found this morning's message from Our Daily Bread to be one of great value and I am hoping that you will also find wisdom and truth in it. Sometimes, more often than not, I find that my reflections on the events of the day to bring me to a discouraging and negative attitude but, after getting some sleep and waking with a fresh mind and perspective, my outlook in the morning is one of renewed hope and anticipation for the possibilities of the coming day, based on God's abilities, will and knowledge of things to come and not on my plans and actions based on my limited ability to only "see" and "know" in the moment. I have to remember and remind myself everyday that my hope can only be founded on God's infinite wisdom and not on my speculations for the day. If I base my hope on the outcome of my plan, I am thrown into complete chaos, uncertainty, and loss of hope with the first thing that doesn't fit into my plan
Our Daily Bread -- Hope To Continue On
September 3, 2014
READ: Lamentations 3:19-33
The
solar-powered airplane Solar Impulse can fly day and night without fuel.
Inventors Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg hope to fly it around the world
in 2015. While the plane flies all day by solar power, it gathers enough energy
to be able to fly all night. When the sun rises, Piccard says, “It brings the
hope again that you can continue.”
The idea of
sunrise bringing us hope makes me think of Lamentations 3 from our Bible
reading for today: “This I recall to my mind, therefore I have hope. Through
theLord’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They
are new every morning” (vv.21-23). Even when God’s people were in the depths of
despair while the city of Jerusalem
was being invaded by the Babylonians, the prophet Jeremiah said they had reason
to hope—they still had the Lord’s mercies and compassions.
Sometimes our
struggles seem worse at night, but when sunrise comes it brings hope again that
we can continue. “Weeping may endure for a night,” the psalmist says, “but joy
comes in the morning” (Ps. 30:5).
Thank You,
Lord, for the hope You send with each sunrise. Your mercies and compassions are
new every morning!—Anne Cetas
New mercies every morning,
Grace for every day,
New hope for every trial,
And courage all the way. —McVeigh
Each
new day gives us new reasons to praise the Lord.
Insight:For 2 years the Babylonians lay siege to Jerusalem. Conditions
within the besieged city were desperate and deplorable. Starvation during the
siege even led to cannibalism (2 Kings 25:1-4; Lam. 2:20; 4:10). Sadly,
Jeremiah witnessed the destruction of the city and temple (Jer. 52:12-27). In
five emotionally charged dirges, or funeral laments (one for each chapter of
Lamentations), he described the sufferings of the people and the reasons for
their suffering. But he also wrote of hope in the midst of despair (Lam.
3:21-32) and of restoration that would come (5:19-22).
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