Showing posts with label money & wealth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money & wealth. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2025

UNRIGHTEOUS MAMMON (LUKE 16:1-13)

 

UNRIGHTEOUS MAMMON

BIBLE PASSAGE: LUKE 16: 1-13

Picture taken from Google

Lesson Prepared by: Krisha of Solomon’s Wisdom FB page

Lesson ideas taken from: enduringword.com/bible-commentary

JULY 11, 2021


MEMORY VERSE

If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches?

LUKE 16:11

 

INTRODUCTION:

One of the most people think about is their future. This is the reason why parents try their best to have a good education for their children so that when they grow up, they can stand on their own and there’s possibility that they could be a great help in the family. But what if you are fired and become jobless. You can no longer get the job you wanted and sad to say you have no other skills to persuade employers. This is what happened to our lesson for today; the parable of an unjust steward. When I first read this parable, I skipped to understand this because I think it takes me more to think and study. Also, I don’t understand why God commended this dishonest steward in verse 8. But before we proceed to that and our lesson points, let’s look the first two verses:

1And he said also unto his disciples, There was a certain rich man, which had a steward; and the same was accused unto him that he had wasted his goods.

And he called him, and said unto him, How is it that I hear this of thee? give an account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer steward.

When the unjust steward heard what his master had said, he thought of ways on how to live. Like what I’ve said earlier, he was now jobless and maybe he was thinking how he could provide now the needs of his family. He had a plan; let’s read verses 3-7. He was desperate and his plan was another dishonest way. But in verse 8 the master commended the dishonest steward.

 

And the lord commended the unjust steward, because he had done wisely: for the children of this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light.

Pinuri ng Panginoon ang mandarayang katiwala dahil sa katalinuhang ipinamalas nito. Sapagkat ang mga makasanlibutan ay mas mahusay gumawa ng paraan kaysa mga maka-Diyos.

 

Based from commentaries, the master was not commending his sins or dishonesty but his wittiness.  The unrighteous steward got it right and the sons of light tend to get it wrong. Jesus is saying that unbelievers are often wiser in figuring out how to secure temporal wealth than believers are in figuring out how to secure eternal riches.

 

In the parable, the steward was squandering his master’s possessions (16:1). We don’t know exactly how he squandered his master’s possessions but the steward was not acting in his master’s best interests, but in his own. What lesson we could get on these verses? One of the key concepts of being a steward is that the steward does not own what the master or owner has entrusted to him. He merely manages it for the owner’s purposes. If the steward begins to act as if he owns it, spending the owner’s resources for his personal betterment rather than for the owner’s benefit, he is an unrighteous, not a faithful, steward. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 4:2, “Moreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found faithful.”

 

This is a warning for all of us who are stewards. We need to be faithful stewards. Being a faithful steward is easy or there are challenges? Let me ask you, who knows here about Chinkee Tan? He is a top Filipino motivational speaker, wealth and life coach whose goal is to inform, educate, motivate, and financial educator His vision is to help people become financially-literate and debt-free. We can see him in any social media platform. He has many followers. We don’t see any bad thing about what he wants to educate but let me say the caption he posted in one of his videos, the caption is, how can you be rich? His caption is an attention getter because everybody wants to be rich, right? No one would say, I don’t want to be rich. If it’s not possible for our present situation to be rich, all we want is to have a financial stability. Am I right? Like for example: we could pay our bills, buy food and eat three times a day. And if these needs are supplied regularly, the desire to have a good house to live in, begins to sprout in us? Then another thing, you want to have a small business for preparation of your retirement. These are just some of the thoughts the unbelievers think for their future. How about Christians, do they think the same way? Yes, that’s why we study and work hard. The question is, how could we guard ourselves from the power of money or wealth? But what if we spend our lives pursuing success only to find out that we’re already heading in the wrong direction? What if we get rich only to discover that we’re really poor?

 

Let’s go back to the question, how could we guard ourselves from the power of unrighteous mammon, the riches of this world?

 

LESSON OUTLINE:

1.  USING MONEY NOW WITH AN EYE TO ETERNITY (LUKE 16:9)

And I say unto you, Make to yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness; that, when ye fail, they may receive you into everlasting habitations.

Tagalog: At nagpatuloy si Jesus sa pagsasalita, “Kaya’t sinasabi ko sa inyo: gamitin ninyo sa pakikipagkaibigan ang kayamanan ng sanlibutang ito. Maubos man ito’y may tatanggap naman sa inyo sa tahanang walang hanggan.

 

Here’s a question, if we hear of a good investment opportunity that is reasonably certain to earn a decent profit and we have the funds to invest, we will probably jump at the chance, right? This is the job of my brother-in-law; he looks for investors and make sure he would invest it in right company. He also needs to guard his rating as financial adviser because if he made a wrong choice, his rating got low, and he would have a hard time finding investors. Like the steward, he was banned being a manager. Let me ask you again, would you invest some of your funds to Apple Inc., an American multinational technology company? Yes, of course! How about in spiritual matters, if we hear of a window of opportunity for the gospel, should we do all we can to seize it while we can? In the same way, if we hear of an opportunity for the gospel and God has given us funds to invest, should we go for it?

The world is filled with financial planners and advisers; and it is good for Christians to learn how to use their money wisely. But when most Christians talk about wise money management, they forget to practice the most important kind of long-term investing: investing with an eye to eternity, an everlasting home. The important thing is to invest your resources for the Lord now; most of us wait until the day when we think we will have enough and that’s wrong.

 

But we can use our money now to store up treasures in heaven by making eternal friends through the gospel. Can you imagine the joy someday of meeting someone in heaven who says, “Thank you for giving to the cause of world of missions or evangelization! Because you gave, missionaries came to my country, and I got saved.” What an investment!

 

2.  FAITHFULNESS IN THE LITTLE THINGS SHOWS HOW ONE WILL BE FAITHFUL IN THE LARGE THINGS (LUKE 16:10-12)

He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much.

If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches?

And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man's, who shall give you that which is your own?

Is money a big deal to unbelievers? How about to believers, is it a big deal as well? Let me tell you a story in a church in USA.

In a church in California, a very wealthy man who was in his eighties had set up a fund to help young people who wanted to go into Christian work attend Christian colleges or seminaries. He had moved out of the area and the fund was depleted, so a person in charge wrote him a very tactful letter thanking him for his generosity, telling him of some of the young people who had been helped, and informing him that the fund had been depleted. He wrote back an angry letter accusing the church of being after his money and telling the church that if they ever asked him for money again, he wouldn’t give!

The church hadn’t even asked for money; they had just informed him that the fund was depleted. They were sure that he could have given $100,000 to the fund and he still would have had plenty left for all his years on this earth. Sadly, none of this man’s four grown children were Christians, and they were all financially successful. But rather than willing his large estate to the Lord’s work, he probably willed it all to his unbelieving children. His money was a big deal to him! (story taken from: https://bible.org/seriespage/lesson-74-how-be-truly-rich-luke-161-13)

YES, it’s a big deal to everybody. Let’s go back to verse 1:

 

a)   He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much: Money is a big deal to people but we see in Jesus’ words, money is considered to be one of the least things. Therefore, if a person cannot be faithful in managing the things that are least, they should not be trusted to be faithful in handling the things that are much.

I remember what Pastor Rod mentioned, if you’re not faithful giving your tithes in 5,000 which is P500 how can you be trusted to P500,000 worth of money, the 10% of it is 50, 000.

 

b)   If you have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? 

If there are true riches, it means there are false riches. The false riches are the riches of this world, that are measured in bank accounts and material possessions. There’s a story about a prospector who was searching for gold in the Panamint Range of the Mojave Desert. He was evidently trying to walk out in that desert heat carrying two heavy bags. The exertion of trying to carry the heavy load was too much and he was overcome with heat prostration and dehydration. Realizing that he was about to die, he scribbled his last words on a piece of paper that was found clutched in his hand. It read, "I died rich." They opened that bags that he had been carrying and found them filled with iron pyrite or fools' gold. Some of you may think that you are going to die rich, but you are deceiving yourself, you will be an eternal pauper. The riches you possess are false riches.

 

How about the Christian leaders who are entrusted with ministries? They must be good managers of their own money. If a person can’t be faithful before God with the money He gives, how can they be faithful with the care of people?

 

- This certainly does not mean that leaders in the church have to be wealthy or make a lot of money. It is an issue of how they manage the resources God has given to them, not how great their resources are.

 

The true riches are the eternal riches. Jesus told us not to lay up for ourselves treasure on earth, where moths and rust can decay and thieves can break in and steal, material riches are not true riches, but lay-up treasure in heaven. True riches are not measured by how much you have in your account in the local bank, but how much have you deposited in your heavenly bank account. God has an interesting way of accounting your deposits, it is not how much the deposit was, but how much did it cost you.

 

c)    If you have not been faithful in what is another man’s: Here, Jesus seems to refer to the fact that all our riches belong to God, and we must see that we are managing His resources. Faithfulness in this will result in blessing that is our own (who will give you what is your own).

-       So, God is testing men by giving them money, that He may know how far to trust them...” (Meyer)

-      God owns everything and we are stewards or managers of what He has entrusted to us. We are stewards of our time, our abilities, and our possessions and money.

But God views our money as a very little thing. It is the litmus test by which God tests us to see if we can handle true riches, namely, souls. If we are faithful in managing the money God gives us for His purposes, He will entrust eternal souls into our care. We will have eternal rewards in heaven, even if we don’t have much in terms of earthly possessions. The ironic thing is you are 100 percent certain to lose all the money you accumulate on this earth—it will fail (16:9). You are 100 percent certain to keep all the rewards you lay up in heaven—they are your own (16:12), secure where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in to steal (Matt. 6:20).

3.  NO ONE CAN BE FAITHFUL TO MORE THAN ONE MASTER (LUKE 16:13)

No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.

a.   No servant can serve two masters: Having two masters is not like working two jobs. Jesus has the master and slave relationship in view. A slave can’t belong to two masters at the same time.

 

-      Jesus states that serving two masters is a simple impossibility. If you think that you are successfully serving two masters, you are deceived. One can have both money and God; but one cannot serve both money and God.

-      Certainly, Jesus spoke about the heart here. Many people would say they love God, but their service of money shows that in fact they do not. How can we tell Who or what we serve? One way is by this principle: You will sacrifice for your God. If you will sacrifice for the sake of money, but will not sacrifice for the sake of Jesus, don’t deceive yourself: money is your God.

-      On a Friday afternoon in 1990, a businessman staggered to the steps of his Los Angeles office. Before he died of the gunshot wound to his chest, he called out the names of his three children. But he still had his $10,000 Rolex watch clutched in his hand. He was the victim of a rash of Rolex robberies – and was killed as a sacrifice to his god.

-      A 1992 story in the Los Angeles Times talked about Michelle, a successful writer and editor, who fears the day her husband might discover her secret stash of credit cards, her secret post office box or the other tricks she uses to hide how much money she spends shopping for herself. “I make as much money as my husband… If I want a $500 suit from Ann Taylor, I deserve it and don’t want to be hassled about it. So, the easiest thing to do is lie,” she explains. Last year, when her husband forced her to destroy one of her credit cards, Michelle went out and got a new one without telling him. “I do live in fear. If he discovers this new VISA, he’ll kill me.”

-      A schoolteacher explained more: “Men just don’t understand that shopping is our drug of choice,” she joked, even while admitting that some months her salary goes exclusively to paying the minimum balance on her credit cards. “Walking through the door of South Coast Plaza is like walking through the gates of heaven. God made car trunks for women to hide shopping bags in.”

-      A young professional named Mary explained: “Shopping is my recreation. It’s my way of pampering myself. When you walk into [a mall] and you see all the stores, it’s like something takes over and you get caught up in it.”

 

b.   You cannot serve God and mammon: Some think that just because they are not rich, they are not a slave to money (mammon). But you don’t have to be rich to serve mammon; the poor have just as much potential for greed and covetousness as the rich have.

-      “When God is served, Mammon is used beneficently. When Mammon is served, the claims of God are ignored.” (Morgan)

 

-      “The worldling’s wisdom (as the ostrich’s wings) to make him outrun others upon earth, and in earthly things; but helps him never a wit toward heaven.” (Trapp)

 

-     “Money possessing a man is the direst curse, for it hardens his heart and paralyzes his noblest powers. The money of a God-possessed man is a blessing, for it becomes the means of his expressing his sympathy with his fellows.” (Morgan)

CONLUSION:

Every business manager knows that the owner will be checking the books to see how things are going. If the business has been earning a profit for the owner, then the manager may get a raise. But if the manager has been skimming off the profits to finance his new yacht and his Mercedes, he’s going to be in trouble when the books are examined. The idea of accountability is inherent in the concept of management or stewardship.

Crucial to being a good steward is understanding the owner’s purpose for his business. In the world, the purpose usually is to make all the money you can. But what is our Master’s purpose? Jesus tells us in verse 9: “Make friends for yourselves by means of the mammon of unrighteousness; that when it fails, they may receive you into the eternal dwellings.” Mammon comes from an Aramaic word meaning riches. By “the mammon of unrighteousness,” Jesus means money, which the world uses for unrighteous purposes, but which believers can use for God’s purposes. Jesus means that just as the unrighteous steward used his master’s money to make friends for himself, so that when he got fired, they would welcome him into their homes, so we should use our Master’s money to make friends for ourselves in heaven. Like what I have said previously and based on some bible scholars this refers to the friends who have become Christians because of our faithful stewardship. When earthly riches fail, as they surely will when we die, we will have friends in heaven who are there because we gave to the cause of world evangelization.

Each of us must ask ourselves the sober question, “Am I managing the resources God has entrusted to me with a view to giving an account some day in light of His purpose of being glorified among all the nations through the spreading of the gospel?” God is a generous and gracious Father, who gives to us not only enough for our basic needs, but also for our enjoyment. So, it is not wrong to enjoy many things beyond the bare essentials. But, if we grasp the concept of faithful stewardship and accountability, our focus will not be on our own financial success, but rather on the financial “success” of God’s enterprise, namely, the gospel.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Monday, September 18, 2023

REMEMBER THE LORD

 

REMEMBER THE LORD…







BIBLE PASSAGE: Deuteronomy 8:1-18

  • Picture taken from Google
  • Lesson Prepared by: Krisha of Solomon’s Wisdom FB page
  • Scheduled Teacher: Sis.Roxanna Z.Velena
  • Lesson Revised Dated Aug.18,2019

December 18, 2022

 

MEMORY VERSE

But thou shalt remember the Lord thy God: for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth, that he may establish his covenant which he sware unto thy fathers, as it is this day.

Deuteronomy 8:18

 

INTRODUCTION:

This month is a month of giving because of the special day we celebrate every year, commemorating Christ’s birth. With this, it’s normal to receive gifts from love ones and friends and sometimes because it’s normal, the word “thank you” is just two words we say with our own mouths.

Another thing, we will surely give gifts to our “inaanaks” and what would you feel if your gifts are not appreciated or haven’t received a word of “thanks?”

 

There is a Filipino saying, “Ang hindi lumingon sa pinanggalingan ay hindi makakaparoon sa paroroonan” is a good saying in terms of remembering who you were in the past and this makes you thankful and humble. We always say to people who have been successful “He or She has changed a lot” and sometimes we judge them with their ways and attitude at the present without thinking that there’s big possibility that we will be the same with them if our status in life changed. Therefore, it’s hard to promise that you wouldn’t be the same with others who easily forget what they were, before they are become successful. Another thing if you would not be saying any promise, there’s also tendency you would do nothing. Now what is the key for staying your faith, Christian attitude and status despite of your success? In our lesson for today it says, “REMEMBER THE LORD”.

 

LESSON OUTLINE:

1.  REMEMBER WHERE OUR BLESSINGS AND PROVISION COME FROM (V.10)

10 When thou hast eaten and art full, then thou shalt bless the Lord thy God for the good land which he hath given thee.

-      This passage starts with an excellent piece of advice: when you are satisfied, content or fulfilled, your first reaction should be to thank God and praise Him for what He has done. We’re used to thanking God for a meal, but what about our wages? When you open your paycheck or check your direct deposit, is your first thought to praise God for providing your money? https://bible.org/seriespage/biography-betrayer-matthew-261-16

 

-      In times of abundance, it is easy to forget the Lord, or to at least no longer seek Him with the urgency we once had. Also, we often think highly of our own hard work and brilliance. Yet we must see that God gives us the body, the brain, and the talent. It is all of God.

-      Proverbs 30:9-10 say, “Remove far from me vanity and lies: give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me:  Lest I be full, and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord? or lest I be poor, and steal, and take the name of my God in vain.” These are some of the verses prove that life situations make us forget the Lord or either become disobedient in His words. If we just remember that everything we have comes from God, we would not be stray.

 

2.  REMEMBER THERE IS WARNING FOR FAILURE TO RECOGNIZE THIS (V.11-14).

We have heard many words and promises coming from people before they became successful and they always answer, “I’m still the person whom you knew before and I would remain as it should be” but though there were some words of certainty that they would remain the same, they still change as the years go by. What makes a person forget the Lord without his knowledge?

Here, we see how we get into trouble.

-      Many people find that it is easier to praise God in their suffering than it is

 to praise Him in their success.

-      Success often blinds us to God’s provisions. Success lulls us into a false sense of self-sufficiency, and that only leads us away from God

-      When things are going good—job promotions, raised incomes, obedient children, good grades—it is easy to sit back and think that we deserve these things.

-      As we convince ourselves that our blessings are the result of only our own hard work, we slowly begin to lose sight of the Lord.

-      Verse 14 issues a solemn warning that we cannot ignore. If we keep our eyes on our own accomplishments, then our hearts become proud.

-      The indictment of pride is a serious offense. Pride is one of the few things of which Scripture says God absolutely hates. (Proverbs 6:16–19)

https://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/god-owns-it-all-mark-mitchell-sermon-on-trusting-god-

-      Pride doesn’t exist in our hearts instantly; it grows slowly and sometimes we don’t recognize it. It is very subtle, and we need to be aware of it and have that discernment by keep on meditating God’s word and be prayerful.

 

3.  REMEMBER WHAT GOD HAS DONE IN THE PAST TO STAND STRONG TODAY (V.15-16)

15 Who led thee through that great and terrible wilderness, wherein were fiery serpents, and scorpions, and drought, where there was no water; who brought thee forth water out of the rock of flint;

16 Who fed thee in the wilderness with manna, which thy fathers knew not, that he might humble thee, and that he might prove thee, to do thee good at thy latter end;

 

This passage drives home the point that God is the one who has done the work. Speaking to the Israelites, Moses recounts all of God’s miracles throughout their journeys through the desert. The overriding theme in these two verses is clear: God did it. Whatever it is you think you accomplished, think again. God did it.

 

Have you remembered something happened in the past that makes you realize today why that situation happened? Have you experienced being betrayed? Have you experienced being alone? Have you experienced sadness because you were away from people you love? Have you experienced staying in the dark? These are the things happened to Joseph but at the end he didn’t blame the people made him experienced those things because he saw these as the hand of God guiding him to help his family. It was God’s will.

 

Sometimes people remember their past and make them proud of themselves but in this point, God is pointing out that remember the blessings of the Lord. Like the Israelites, God reminded them by asking: who led them in the wilderness? who fed them? and who guarded them to make them safe? Whatever we face today it’s the best to rely on god in bad times as well as bad because He knows everything we take.

Let me tell you a story got from the internet

During World War II, a US marine was separated from his unit on a Pacific Island. The fighting had been intense, and in the smoke and the crossfire he had lost touch with his comrades.

Alone in the jungle, he could hear enemy soldiers coming in his direction. Scrambling for cover, he found his way up a high ridge to several small caves in the rock. Quickly he crawled inside one of the caves. Although safe for the moment, he realized that once the enemy soldiers looking for him swept up the ridge, they would quickly search all the caves and he would be killed.

As he waited, he prayed, "Lord, if it be your will, please protect me. Whatever your will though, I love you and trust you. Amen."

After praying, he lay quietly listening to the enemy begin to draw close. He thought, "Well, I guess the Lord isn't going to help me out of this one.." Then he saw a spider begin to build a web over the front of his cave.

As he watched, listening to the enemy searching for him all the while, the spider layered strand after strand of web across the opening of the cave.

"Ha, he thought. "What I need is a brick wall and what the Lord has sent me is a spider web. God does have a sense of humor."

As the enemy drew closer, he watched from the darkness of his hideout and could see them searching one cave after another. As they came to his, he got ready to make his last stand. To his amazement, however, after glancing in the direction of his cave, they moved on. Suddenly, he realized that with the spider web over the entrance, his cave looked as if no one had entered for quite a while. "Lord, forgive me," prayed the young man. "I had forgotten that in you a spider's web is stronger than a brick wall."

We all face times of great trouble. When we do, it is so easy to forget the victories that God would work in our lives, sometimes in the most surprising ways. As the great leader, Nehemiah, reminded the people of Israel when they faced the task of rebuilding Jerusalem, "In God we will have success!" [Nehemiah 2:20]

Remember: Whatever is happening in your life, with God, a mere spider's web can become a brick wall of protection. Believe He is with you always. Just speak His name through Jesus His son, and you will see His great power and love for you.

Source Unknown 

4.   WE ARE CALLED TO “REMEMBER THE LORD” BECAUSE HE IS THE ONE WHO GIVES US THE ABILITY TO PRODUCE WEALTH (V. 17- 18)

17 And thou say in thine heart, My power and the might of mine hand hath gotten me this wealth.

18 But thou shalt remember the Lord thy God: for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth, that he may establish his covenant which he sware unto thy fathers, as it is this day.

Verse 17 says what most of think in our moments of triumph: “My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me. That is, “Hey, look what I did! I worked hard and I made this money!” How often have we said, or at least thought, something like this? Verse 18 tells us the antidote to this kind of self-congratulation

 

It is interesting that in the opening of the passage, we are warned not to forget (a passive act), and here at the end, we are called to actively remember. This shows that forgetting something, or someone, is easy. We just relax our minds, focus on the things we can put our hands on, and let the important things slip right out of our minds. However, remembering is more intentional. It is active. It indicates a sharp, controlled and disciplined mind. We can forget something accidentally, but we must focus to remember. I think this is one way in which Scripture is calling us to master our thoughts.

 

5.   REMEMBER GOD OWNS EVERYTHING (PSALM 24:1)

“The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein.”

-Psalm 24:1-

God owns it all. That doesn’t just mean that God owns all the land and all the “stuff.” It means:

-      God gives us our abilities.

-      God gives us our resources.

-      God gives us our skills and talents.

-      God gives us opportunities to earn money.

-      God gives us bodies and strength and energy to work.

-      God gives our employers the money to pay us with.

 

There is a story of a wife of an Indonesian businessman named Erny. She is a survivor of tsunami in Indonesia in the year 2004. She is 36 years old when it happened. Erny and her husband owned a business selling motorbike spare parts and a repair workshop for motorbikes. She has often shared with people that before she knew the Lord Jesus, her business was just normal but after knowing the Lord personally through their teacher and evangelist Mirna, who frequently comes to Malabo, She could see the abundant blessing of God upon their family and business. More importantly, she has become God fearing, leaving her bad temper, her old sinful habits and all that are not related to God. So successful was their workshop business that they became well-known from the western part of Ache to the regions of Sin bang. Not only they were blessed materially, but more importantly, they were blessed spiritually as well. They had peace, marital joy, good children, good health and a purposeful life serving the Lord. These are the blessings that they received from the goodness of our Lord Jesus. He is so kind to those who believe and love Him.

To make the story short, they experienced great earthquake and she thought she was the only person in the family survived in the tsunami because of the waves. When the water subsided, she saw the dead people. She was relieved a little when shemet pastor Amyati there. He is the shepherd of our congregation and he greeted and hugged her. Erny whispered in her ear, “I am all alone in this world now.” Then he reprimanded me and said, “Sister, don’t have such awful thoughts, we do not know yet. Put your hope in God. Come, let us pray for them.” Shortly afterwards, someone greeted her and told her that her children and her husband are safe. She shouted for joy, giving thanks to God because He saved her most precious possession. She cannot describe the relief she felt. She cried and cried. “Thank you Lord. Even though our 4 shops and the two cars (totaling five billion rupiahs) were destroyed, our lives are more precious than all of these. Once again, Amyati asked me to pray and give thanks to God for His mighty love.

That night, many thoughts went through her mind. They had lost all their possessions. She had plans to redecorate their home, to make it more beautiful. She had plans to increase her  wealth and also various plans for the future right up to their retirement age, because she was already 41. But human thoughts and plans are futile. The glory of the world is like vapor, God says. Then she understood the part in the Bible where God says,

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways”.

One wonderful lesson she’s learned from this that tsunami is that from now on, she must be faithful in tithing and be grateful that the Lord is most gracious and loving – He did not repay her from her wrong doings but gave safety to her family. She believes that as she tithes, everything that was lost will be returned. God’s Word is never wrong. She was one that was wrong all the while and, in the future, she will strive to be faithful in all things.

 

Sometimes tragedy happens for us to realize that God is the owner of all things and He’s in control of everything. This reminds us not to be proud and be humble because we can do nothing without God.

 

CONCLUSION:

God also wants us to remember how He specially cares for us. He is good.

8:3 And He humbled you and let you be hungry, and fed you with manna which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that He might make you understand that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by everything that proceeds out of the mouth of the LORD."

God does humble His people. He humbled the Israelites in the desert. He had them become hungry. Hunger is a very desperate need. Sometimes man is so consumed in his perspective of life, though, that there is no other way to correct man's waywardness other than through destroying the very things that he cherishes. You, like I, would not like to go through times of hunger. God has a clear purpose, however. We need to understand something. This understanding is so important that the Lord God is willing to break our personal piggy banks and bring our societies through chaotic times.

 

REMEMBER WHO YOU WERE (HEBREWS 2:13-15)

  REMEMBER WHO YOU WERE Bible Passage: Hebrews 2: 13-15 Lesson Prepared by: krisha of Solomon Wisdom FB page Lesson ideas taken: LESSON KE...