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Nov 04 2024

11/03/24- East Rock campus- Gethsemane Gathering

https://www.cotnaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/241103ER.mp3

Download file | Play in new window | Duration: 36:42 | Recorded on November 3, 2024

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn

https://www.bible.com/events/49341785

Church of the Nazarene East Rockingham Campus

Gethsemane Gathering

“Stay awake with me and pray”

Today we are going to have what we call a Gethsemane Gathering.

You may recognize the name Gethsemane from the gospels as it is the name of the garden where Jesus went to pray.

Let’s dive into the story in Matthew 26

Matthew 26:36-41

Then Jesus went with his disciples to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to them, “Sit here while I go over there and pray.” He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee along with him, and he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.” Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.” Then he returned to his disciples and found them sleeping. “Couldn’t you men keep watch with me for one hour?” he asked Peter. “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”

Jesus takes Peter, James, and John to pray with him. Hours before his crucifixion, Jesus is pouring his heart out to the father, and he doesn’t want to do it alone. He wanted his closest friends to pray with him, to keep watch.

Jesus is pouring his heart out in prayer and he returns to find his 3 closest friends are taking a nap. Arguably when he needed them the most, they missed the opportunity.

Jesus goes away a second time, wrestling, pouring his heart out in prayer. As he finishes praying he comes back a second time to check on his friends, and they are fast asleep. again. This time, he doesn’t even wake them up. Jesus just goes back to pray on his own. A foreshadowing of what was in the hours ahead. That’s the story of the Garden.

Today our goal is to symbolically give back that one hour that the disciples missed that night in prayer.

We are going to spend our time together today in prayer and worship. We will focus on 7 different areas in prayer while the band leads us in worship throughout the service.

Our first area of focus is Souls

Father,

For the one, for the many, I pray.

None are lost to You, for You know just where each soul You created has wandered.

Let me be to those who don’t know You a voice of hope, a peace-filled presence, and an example of the transformation You can make in a surrendered life.

So that they each and all might come to know You. Amen.

Opportunities

Father,

Open my eyes that I may see the opportunities You place in front of me.

Let no conversation, no interaction, no path crossed be wasted.

I give You each coincidence and happenstance and invite You to give meaning to each moment of my life, so that I may be a part of Your movement all around me. Amen.

Petitions

Father,

I don’t know how to ask it.

I don’t know what to say.

Tam without words.

But You know. You know my heart, my mind and my needs better than I know myself.

So I trust You and give myself over to Your way. Amen.

Relationships

Father,

Where they are wrong, give me the grace and humility to forgive.

Where I am wrong, give me the grace and humility to apologize.

Where others are at odds, help me broker peace.

Where I am at odds, help me accept counsel.

Father, forgive us, for we know not what we do. Amen

Adoration

You are more than all I could ever hope for.

You are perfect and holy, above all others.

You give such good gifts and yet without a single gift given, I am richly blessed with You alone.

When I was all that is undeserving, You gave everything I could never deserve.

Father.

Abba.

Lord.

Yes/Yield

Father,

You have my yes.

Yes to whatever, to wherever, to whenever, to however.

Yes to all of You. Amen.

Written by

Oct 29 2024

10/27/24- Harrisonburg campus: Joshua Part 7- Pastor Janette Berge

https://www.cotnaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/241027H.mp3

Download file | Play in new window | Duration: 32:07 | Recorded on October 29, 2024

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn

https://www.bible.com/events/49338349

Church of the Nazarene East Rockingham Campus

Joshua: Part 7 East Rock

“Hold fast to the Lord”

We are continuing in Part 7 of our teaching series through the book of Joshua.

Within the story of Joshua we read of the people of God encountering real obstacles to living out their faith in the Lord. Flooded rivers, fortified cities, and giant armies. real things that would cause any normal person to fear.

But what we see is that in the face of these challenges, is the power of God’s presence and his continued faithfulness to his people. That’s the story of Joshua, and that’s our story today.

Real challenges met with the real and true faithfulness of God.

Today we are in Joshua chapter 23 looking at the farewell address of a very old Joshua.

Joshua 23:1-2

After a long time had passed and the Lord had given Israel rest from all their enemies around them, Joshua, by then a very old man, summoned all Israel—their elders, leaders, judges and officials—and said to them: “I am very old.

The battles are done for now and the people of God have rest. After 20-25 years they are finally getting to peacefully enjoy God’s gift to them of the promised land.

Joshua appears here as a very old man, gathering the leaders of Israel together to share his heart with them. These parting instructions are critical for future success of the people of God.

Joshua 23:3-5

You yourselves have seen everything the Lord your God has done to all these nations for your sake; it was the Lord your God who fought for you. Remember how I have allotted as an inheritance for your tribes all the land of the nations that remain—the nations I conquered—between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea in the west. The Lord your God himself will push them out for your sake. He will drive them out before you, and you will take possession of their land, as the Lord your God promised you.

Joshua begins by remembering and reflecting on all that God had done for the Israelites in fulfilling his promise to his people.

While they did have rest in the land at this time, but there was still more territory for them to take possession of. Canaanites, the enemy nations, were still living in some farther regions of the promised land.

But they were not to worry- God would fight for them, just like he had before. God was faithful then, he’s faithful now, he will be faithful in the future.

All the people needed to do was remain faithful to Him- That’s what Joshua says next

Joshua 23:6-11

“Be very strong; be careful to obey all that is written in the Book of the Law of Moses, without turning aside to the right or to the left. Do not associate with these nations that remain among you; do not invoke the names of their gods or swear by them. You must not serve them or bow down to them. But you are to hold fast to the Lord your God, as you have until now. “The Lord has driven out before you great and powerful nations; to this day no one has been able to withstand you. One of you routs a thousand, because the Lord your God fights for you, just as he promised. So be very careful to love the Lord your God.

Rather than associating with the other nations, the people of God are to hold fast to the Lord.

To hold fast to the Lord can carry the idea of two objects being glued or welded together. Relationally It speaks of loyalty and fidelity. It means to stay close, embrace, to hold on.

That’s the way Joshua is encouraging his people to be with their heavenly father.

The people of God had seen the blessing of embracing the Lord.

He gave them life and identity as his children. He brought them into this land over incredible odds, and even their own mistakes. God had fought for them, he had driven out powerful armies from their path.

He gave them power to do impossible things. One person routing a thousand. This is the picture of life holding onto God.

When you are superglued to the Lord, there is no enemy that can stand.

Joshua 23:12-13

“But if you turn away and ally yourselves with the survivors of these nations that remain among you and if you intermarry with them and associate with them, then you may be sure that the Lord your God will no longer drive out these nations before you. Instead, they will become snares and traps for you, whips on your backs and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from this good land, which the Lord your God has given you.

This is quite the contrast from life in relationship to the Lord.

Rather than the promise of God’s presence, his power, his plan for their lives, if his people turned away from him, they could be sure that it would not go well.

Listen to what Joshua says. If you turn away from the Lord, if you don’t cling to him and you go and embrace the ways of the foreign nations, the ways of the world.

They will become a snare for you.

This carries the idea of being entangled, confined, controlled, held captive by circumstances. Deceived.

It will be a trap-

Literally you will take the bait and be trapped. Stuck. Caught in their grasp.

They will be a whip on your back-This imagery is of scourging, like Jesus and Paul received.

They will be a thorn in your eye. A simple eyelash in your eye is enough to stop you in your tracks. Imagine a thorn.

This misery would be their path until they perished form the land God had given them..

All that God had done for them in giving them their land, all he miracles we have studied so far, they would forfeit, they would lose, if they chose to forsake the Lord.

Think of the enormous tragedy in that statement.

And it was their choice, Joshua loved them enough to warn them in his final words.

If you follow the story of God’s people after the book of Joshua, you wont get far until you see them making the very choice that Joshua warned them about.

They began to intermarry with the people who were still in the land. They picked up their values, took on their morals, and began to worship their gods.

And they were trapped, enslaved, beaten, suffered immensely, until finally a few hundred years after Joshua, they were completely removed from their land by the Babylonian empire. Just like Joshua said it would be.

They became glued and attached to the world, rather than embracing and clinging to the Lord and it cost them everything.

In verse 8 Joshua told the people to hold fast to the Lord.That whole idea of loyalty, embracing, sticking fast, literally being glued to the Lord.

That is the same word and the same idea in verse 12 when he warns them not be allied to the world. Don’t be glued to the world, to the neighboring nations.

The simplicity and clarity of this is striking. Joshua doesn’t mix any words, doesn’t sugar coat the truth. He says “you have a choice; you can embrace the Lord, being loyal to him and find life or you can embrace the world, be loyal to its values, and find misery and death.

Friends, as striking and tragic as that warning was for the people in Joshua’s day- it’s every bit as true for us today.

As Christians, we have a great inheritance of salvation by grace through faith in Christ. Eternal life, forgiveness of sins, and God’s presence living within us and going before us. But if we turn away from that, if we choose to embrace the world, we will set our lives on a course of misery leading to destruction. We become trapped, snared, beat down, miserable, on a pathway of destruction.

So i would ask you today, what are you “glued to”? What we give our lives to, what we embrace in this world is not a matter of opinion and preference, it’s literally a matter of eternal life or death.

Written by

Oct 28 2024

10/27/24- East Rock campus: Joshua Part 7- Pastor Jared Link

https://www.cotnaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/241027ER.mp3

Download file | Play in new window | Duration: 34:34 | Recorded on October 28, 2024

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn

https://www.bible.com/events/49338349

Church of the Nazarene East Rockingham Campus

Joshua: Part 7 East Rock

“Hold fast to the Lord”

We are continuing in Part 7 of our teaching series through the book of Joshua.

Within the story of Joshua we read of the people of God encountering real obstacles to living out their faith in the Lord. Flooded rivers, fortified cities, and giant armies. real things that would cause any normal person to fear.

But what we see is that in the face of these challenges, is the power of God’s presence and his continued faithfulness to his people. That’s the story of Joshua, and that’s our story today.

Real challenges met with the real and true faithfulness of God.

Today we are in Joshua chapter 23 looking at the farewell address of a very old Joshua.

Joshua 23:1-2

After a long time had passed and the Lord had given Israel rest from all their enemies around them, Joshua, by then a very old man, summoned all Israel—their elders, leaders, judges and officials—and said to them: “I am very old.

The battles are done for now and the people of God have rest. After 20-25 years they are finally getting to peacefully enjoy God’s gift to them of the promised land.

Joshua appears here as a very old man, gathering the leaders of Israel together to share his heart with them. These parting instructions are critical for future success of the people of God.

Joshua 23:3-5

You yourselves have seen everything the Lord your God has done to all these nations for your sake; it was the Lord your God who fought for you. Remember how I have allotted as an inheritance for your tribes all the land of the nations that remain—the nations I conquered—between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea in the west. The Lord your God himself will push them out for your sake. He will drive them out before you, and you will take possession of their land, as the Lord your God promised you.

Joshua begins by remembering and reflecting on all that God had done for the Israelites in fulfilling his promise to his people.

While they did have rest in the land at this time, but there was still more territory for them to take possession of. Canaanites, the enemy nations, were still living in some farther regions of the promised land.

But they were not to worry- God would fight for them, just like he had before. God was faithful then, he’s faithful now, he will be faithful in the future.

All the people needed to do was remain faithful to Him- That’s what Joshua says next

Joshua 23:6-11

“Be very strong; be careful to obey all that is written in the Book of the Law of Moses, without turning aside to the right or to the left. Do not associate with these nations that remain among you; do not invoke the names of their gods or swear by them. You must not serve them or bow down to them. But you are to hold fast to the Lord your God, as you have until now. “The Lord has driven out before you great and powerful nations; to this day no one has been able to withstand you. One of you routs a thousand, because the Lord your God fights for you, just as he promised. So be very careful to love the Lord your God.

Rather than associating with the other nations, the people of God are to hold fast to the Lord.

To hold fast to the Lord can carry the idea of two objects being glued or welded together. Relationally It speaks of loyalty and fidelity. It means to stay close, embrace, to hold on.

That’s the way Joshua is encouraging his people to be with their heavenly father.

The people of God had seen the blessing of embracing the Lord.

He gave them life and identity as his children. He brought them into this land over incredible odds, and even their own mistakes. God had fought for them, he had driven out powerful armies from their path.

He gave them power to do impossible things. One person routing a thousand. This is the picture of life holding onto God.

When you are superglued to the Lord, there is no enemy that can stand.

Joshua 23:12-13

“But if you turn away and ally yourselves with the survivors of these nations that remain among you and if you intermarry with them and associate with them, then you may be sure that the Lord your God will no longer drive out these nations before you. Instead, they will become snares and traps for you, whips on your backs and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from this good land, which the Lord your God has given you.

This is quite the contrast from life in relationship to the Lord.

Rather than the promise of God’s presence, his power, his plan for their lives, if his people turned away from him, they could be sure that it would not go well.

Listen to what Joshua says. If you turn away from the Lord, if you don’t cling to him and you go and embrace the ways of the foreign nations, the ways of the world.

They will become a snare for you.

This carries the idea of being entangled, confined, controlled, held captive by circumstances. Deceived.

It will be a trap-

Literally you will take the bait and be trapped. Stuck. Caught in their grasp.

They will be a whip on your back-This imagery is of scourging, like Jesus and Paul received.

They will be a thorn in your eye. A simple eyelash in your eye is enough to stop you in your tracks. Imagine a thorn.

This misery would be their path until they perished form the land God had given them..

All that God had done for them in giving them their land, all he miracles we have studied so far, they would forfeit, they would lose, if they chose to forsake the Lord.

Think of the enormous tragedy in that statement.

And it was their choice, Joshua loved them enough to warn them in his final words.

If you follow the story of God’s people after the book of Joshua, you wont get far until you see them making the very choice that Joshua warned them about.

They began to intermarry with the people who were still in the land. They picked up their values, took on their morals, and began to worship their gods.

And they were trapped, enslaved, beaten, suffered immensely, until finally a few hundred years after Joshua, they were completely removed from their land by the Babylonian empire. Just like Joshua said it would be.

They became glued and attached to the world, rather than embracing and clinging to the Lord and it cost them everything.

In verse 8 Joshua told the people to hold fast to the Lord.That whole idea of loyalty, embracing, sticking fast, literally being glued to the Lord.

That is the same word and the same idea in verse 12 when he warns them not be allied to the world. Don’t be glued to the world, to the neighboring nations.

The simplicity and clarity of this is striking. Joshua doesn’t mix any words, doesn’t sugar coat the truth. He says “you have a choice; you can embrace the Lord, being loyal to him and find life or you can embrace the world, be loyal to its values, and find misery and death.

Friends, as striking and tragic as that warning was for the people in Joshua’s day- it’s every bit as true for us today.

As Christians, we have a great inheritance of salvation by grace through faith in Christ. Eternal life, forgiveness of sins, and God’s presence living within us and going before us. But if we turn away from that, if we choose to embrace the world, we will set our lives on a course of misery leading to destruction. We become trapped, snared, beat down, miserable, on a pathway of destruction.

So i would ask you today, what are you “glued to”? What we give our lives to, what we embrace in this world is not a matter of opinion and preference, it’s literally a matter of eternal life or death.

Written by

Oct 21 2024

10/20/24- Harrisonburg campus: Joshua Part 6 – Pastor Kevin Griffin

https://www.cotnaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/241020H.mp3

Download file | Play in new window | Duration: 30:54 | Recorded on October 21, 2024

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn

http://bible.com/events/49335430

Church of the Nazarene

Joshua Part 6- COTN Harrisonburg Campus

Joshua Part 6

Joshua 9:3-8

However, when the people of Gibeon heard what Joshua had done to Jericho and Ai, they resorted to a ruse: They went as a delegation whose donkeys were loaded with worn-out sacks and old wineskins, cracked and mended. They put worn and patched sandals on their feet and wore old clothes. All the bread of their food supply was dry and moldy. Then they went to Joshua in the camp at Gilgal and said to him and the Israelites, “We have come from a distant country; make a treaty with us.” The Israelites said to the Hivites, “But perhaps you live near us, so how can we make a treaty with you?” “We are your servants,” they said to Joshua. But Joshua asked, “Who are you and where do you come from?”

Joshua 9:14

The Israelites sampled their provisions but did not inquire of the Lord.

“DISCERNMENT ISN’T KNOWING THE DIFERENCE BETWEEN RIGHT AND WRONG, ITS KNOWING THE DIFFERECE BETWEEN RIGHT AND ALMOST RIGHT.”

– Charles Spurgeon

Joshua 10:1-5

Now Adoni-Zedek king of Jerusalem heard that Joshua had taken Ai and totally destroyed it, doing to Ai and its king as he had done to Jericho and its king, and that the people of Gibeon had made a treaty of peace with Israel and had become their allies. He and his people were very much alarmed at this, because Gibeon was an important city, like one of the royal cities; it was larger than Ai, and all its men were good fighters. So Adoni-Zedek king of Jerusalem appealed to Hoham king of Hebron, Piram king of Jarmuth, Japhia king of Lachish and Debir king of Eglon. “Come up and help me attack Gibeon,” he said, “because it has made peace with Joshua and the Israelites.” Then the five kings of the Amorites—the kings of Jerusalem, Hebron, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon—joined forces. They moved up with all their troops and took up positions against Gibeon and attacked it.

Joshua 10:5-13

Then the five kings of the Amorites—the kings of Jerusalem, Hebron, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon—joined forces. They moved up with all their troops and took up positions against Gibeon and attacked it. The Gibeonites then sent word to Joshua in the camp at Gilgal: “Do not abandon your servants. Come up to us quickly and save us! Help us, because all the Amorite kings from the hill country have joined forces against us.” So Joshua marched up from Gilgal with his entire army, including all the best fighting men. The Lord said to Joshua, “Do not be afraid of them; I have given them into your hand. Not one of them will be able to withstand you.” After an all-night march from Gilgal, Joshua took them by surprise. The Lord threw them into confusion before Israel, so Joshua and the Israelites defeated them completely at Gibeon. Israel pursued them along the road going up to Beth Horon and cut them down all the way to Azekah and Makkedah. As they fled before Israel on the road down from Beth Horon to Azekah, the Lord hurled large hailstones down on them, and more of them died from the hail than were killed by the swords of the Israelites. On the day the Lord gave the Amorites over to Israel, Joshua said to the Lord in the presence of Israel: “Sun, stand still over Gibeon, and you, moon, over the Valley of Aijalon.” So the sun stood still, and the moon stopped, till the nation avenged itself on its enemies, as it is written in the Book of Jashar. The sun stopped in the middle of the sky and delayed going down about a full day.

Joshua 10:14

There has never been a day like it before or since, a day when the Lord listened to a human being. Surely the Lord was fighting for Israel!

Joshua 8:20

The men of Ai looked back and saw the smoke of the city rising up into the sky, but they had no chance to escape in any direction; the Israelites who had been fleeing toward the wilderness had turned back against their pursuers.

Hebrews 13:10

We have an altar from which those who minister at the tabernacle have no right to eat.

Written by

Oct 21 2024

10/20/24- East Rock campus: Joshua Part 6 – Pastor Jared Link

https://www.cotnaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/241020ER.mp3

Download file | Play in new window | Duration: 32:04 | Recorded on October 21, 2024

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn

https://www.bible.com/events/49334932

Church of the Nazarene East Rockingham Campus

Joshua: Part 6 East Rock

Joshua: Part 6 “Scammed”

We are continuing in Part 6 of our teaching series through the book of Joshua.

Within the story of Joshua we read of the people of God encountering real obstacles to living out their faith in the Lord. Flooded rivers, fortified cities, and giant armies. real things that would cause any normal person to fear.

But what we see is that in the face of these challenges, is the power of God’s presence and his continued faithfulness to his people. That’s the story of Joshua, and that’s our story today.

Real challenges met with the real and true faithfulness of God.

Today we are in Joshua chapter 9 looking at the story of the Gibeonite deception.

Joshua 9:3-6

However, when the people of Gibeon heard what Joshua had done to Jericho and Ai, they resorted to a ruse: They went as a delegation whose donkeys were loaded with worn-out sacks and old wineskins, cracked and mended. They put worn and patched sandals on their feet and wore old clothes. All the bread of their food supply was dry and moldy. Then they went to Joshua in the camp at Gilgal and said to him and the Israelites, “We have come from a distant country; make a treaty with us.”

On the heels of the massive destruction of the city of AI, the news about of the Israelites is making its way around to the other cities.

They hear of the power and might of the army and how God is fighting for them and they are terrified. Unsure how defend themselves, several neighboring cities decide to join forces and fight Israel together.

But the Gibeonites different approach, they are going to try to trick the Israelites into allowing them to live.

They gather up old worn-out clothing and sandals, old worn-out wine containers, and moldy bread and they take off pretending to be from a distant land.

Joshua 9:7-8

The Israelites said to the Hivites, “But perhaps you live near us, so how can we make a treaty with you?” “We are your servants,” they said to Joshua. But Joshua asked, “Who are you and where do you come from?”

Something must have seemed fishy about this whole thing or they are remembering that God has specifically told them NOT to enter into treaties with other nations. Either way, Israel questions the supposed weary travelers.

Joshua 9:9-13

They answered: “Your servants have come from a very distant country because of the fame of the Lord your God. For we have heard reports of him: all that he did in Egypt, and all that he did to the two kings of the Amorites east of the Jordan—Sihon king of Heshbon, and Og king of Bashan, who reigned in Ashtaroth. And our elders and all those living in our country said to us, ‘Take provisions for your journey; go and meet them and say to them, “We are your servants; make a treaty with us.” ’ This bread of ours was warm when we packed it at home on the day we left to come to you. But now see how dry and moldy it is. And these wineskins that we filled were new, but see how cracked they are. And our clothes and sandals are worn out by the very long journey.”

At Joshua’s questioning the Gibeonites recite their story and they are careful to highlight all the things that should indicate they were from a distant place. They also say that they have come because they heard about all the Lord had done for his people delivering them from Egypt and giving them victory over the kings in the wilderness.

If you remember back to the story of Rahab and Jericho- she sited very similar reasons for her actions.

This whole story has been building up to this moment. The cards are on the table, the trap is set.

Joshua 9:14-15

The Israelites sampled their provisions but did not inquire of the Lord. Then Joshua made a treaty of peace with them to let them live, and the leaders of the assembly ratified it by oath.

They looked over the evidence that was before them. They saw the molded bread, the looked at the old wineskins. They could see their clothes were worn out. The did the best they could do, it seemed good enough, so they did it.

They trusted their own ability, they trusted their own discernment, and in their own strength, they were deceived into breaking the command of God.

They did not seek the Lord.

The truth of the matter comes out a few days later. They learn that these ambassadors who were supposed to be from a far country are really from a town about 25 miles away.

Joshua 9:22-25

Then Joshua summoned the Gibeonites and said, “Why did you deceive us by saying, ‘We live a long way from you,’ while actually you live near us? You are now under a curse: You will never be released from service as woodcutters and water carriers for the house of my God.” They answered Joshua, “Your servants were clearly told how the Lord your God had commanded his servant Moses to give you the whole land and to wipe out all its inhabitants from before you. So we feared for our lives because of you, and that is why we did this. We are now in your hands. Do to us whatever seems good and right to you.”

With their future secured by the oath, they are free to come clean about their motives and actions. What is revealed is that they had faith that the Lord was going to do what he had promised.

They believed what they heard about him, and they took action. They responded in trying to save themselves by joining the people of God. And it worked.

God had mercy on the Gibeonites because they were responding to him in faith. They would have a long history among the poeple of God.

Even though they did it imperfectly, they lied, they cheated their way in, God did not turn his back on them.

But God’s mercy was present despite human failures on BOTH sides of the story. And friends, that speaks a lot about the Mercy of God that is available to us today.

So often we try to bargain with God, scheme our way into getting him to do what we want.

“Lord if you will get me out of this one, I promise ill never drink again.”

“Lord, if you will save this relationship, I promise ill start reading my bible.”

“Lord, if you get me out of this mess, I swear ill start living right.”

Like the Gibeonites, We find ourselves in the midst of our own difficult circumstances, and we begin to bargain with God about how to get out.

But what if we just came to him in honesty and humility?

If God was willing to have mercy on the Gibeonites and give them a bright future- even to fight for them against their enemies- don’t you think he would do the same for you if you just came to him today and were honest with him?

So today, let’s stop the bargaining, stop the scheming, and come to the Lord in honesty and humility, allowing him to transform our future!

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