Calhoun Times

Every blessing comes from God’s hands

- Bryan Davis is pastor of Encounter Church in Calhoun.

“When you become the father of children and children’s children and remain long in the land and act corruptly and make a graven image in the form of anything and do that which is evil in the sight of Yahweh your God so as to provoke Him to anger, I call heaven and earth to witness against you today, that you will surely perish quickly from the land where you are going over the Jordan to possess it. You shall not prolong your days on it, but will be utterly destroyed.” (Deuteronom­y 4:25-26 — LSB)

The generation that first went into Canaan to possess it were faced with the prospect of battle and conflict, which in my estimation, would be enough to provoke them to continuall­y seek God’s favor.

To walk in that favor would require them to walk upright before Him and keep the covenant delivered to them. In short, the generation that understood what it had taken to get to the land would not soon forget the valuable lessons learned through hardship. However, ensuing generation — those that benefited from the perseveran­ce of others — would eventually abandon the truth.

According to Moses, it was not a matter of “if” but a matter of “when.” It would not necessaril­y be those he was speaking to as much as their descendant­s. For those who witnessed the miracles in the wilderness and the fall of Jericho, they learned of God through experience. But those who did not see these things first hand, it was ancient history — tales of long ago involving people long dead. That scenario made it easier for Israel to succumb to the seductions that surrounded them. Further complicati­ng this situation is the prosperity they would enjoy in the land; prosperity made possible by the goodness of God bestowed upon the obedient from prior generation­s.

In any generation, the blessing of prosperity, if we aren’t diligent to remember the source of that prosperity, can become a curse. It acts like a drug that dulls our spiritual senses. In fact at one point, when Moses, speaking of their eventual apostasy, tells the people “You shall have been long in the land,” he literally said, “When you have grown stale.” Blessing and prosperity caused them to grow spirituall­y stale which then led to serving other gods and general lawlessnes­s. That connects us to the words of Christ who warned those living in the last days, “because lawlessnes­s will abound, the love of many will grow cold” (Matthew 24:12).

The point, then, is that we should not think we are exempt from this danger, particular­ly here in America. Centuries ago, William Bradford, governor of Plymouth Plantation, had this phrase, in Latin, inscribed on his headstone: “What our forefather­s with so much difficulty secured, do not basely relinquish.”

In other words, don’t do what Israel did. Instead let us be those who continuall­y remind this and the upcoming generation that every blessing we enjoy comes from the Hand of the Almighty, and if we wish to continue in those blessings, we must turn our hearts to Him and to His ways.

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