Wednesday, March 26, 2025

THE WAY BACK (GENESIS 35:1-15)

 

THE WAY BACK

BIBLE PASSAGE: GENESIS 35:1-15

Picture taken from Google

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

Lesson ideas taken from: https://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons

APRIL 11, 2021

MEMORY VERSE

Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the Lord.

LAMENTATIONS 3:40

 

INTRODUCTION:

Do you have broken promises to the Lord? I’ll give you few seconds to think… I think you already have answers in mind. Maybe you have because of your own personal reasons. Then, years passed, and you forgot all your promises. Let’s be reminded that doing this makes us weak spiritually. There are also tendencies in our spiritual life that we think we’re okay but actually we’re not.

 

Before we continue, I’ll tell you something. One of the best challenged experiences I have had was travelling by an airplane. Before traveling, I searched how to travel and how it goes. By searching, I found links also about how and why airplanes crash. In 2015, the German jetliner crashed and in 2013 Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crashed while landing at San Francisco International Airport. These two have the same issue, autopilot issue. What is autopilot? It is a device that keeps aircraft, spacecraft and ships moving in a particular direction without human involvement.  The autopilot system relies on a series of sensors around the aircraft that pick-up information like speed, altitude and turbulence. That data is ingested into the computer, which then makes the necessary changes. Basically, it can do almost everything a pilot can do. Key phrase: almost everything. The autopilot does not steer the airplane on the ground or taxi the plane at the gate. Generally, the pilot will handle takeoff and then initiate the autopilot to take over for most of the flight. What actually happened to Asiana Airlines Flight 214? It was cited that it was autopilot issue, and the pilots assumed the autopilot was doing something, but it wasn’t doing something on the safe but highly automated.  Patrick Smith is an active airline pilot who has been flying commercially since 1990. He told CNBC that the traveling public tends to imagine a pilot reclining back, reading a newspaper, while the autopilot does all the work. The reality is actually quite different, he said. “The auto flying system does not fly the airplane,” he said. “The pilots fly the plane through the automation.” (https://www.cnbc.com/2015/03/26/autopilot-what-the-system-can-and-cant-do.html)

Why I quoted this news? Do you get the point here? Sometimes in our Christian journey we let the world, and our own selves take the journey. We don’t let the pilot of life, which is God, take the wheel.

In Genesis 28:18-22, it looks like Jacob makes a sincere vow to God, but as we’re going to see, Jacob is actually doing the same thing many of us do when we find ourselves in a tight spot – he plays “Let’s Make a Deal” with God. He knows that his brother Esau has promised to kill him as soon as Isaac dies, so he makes a deal with God – “God if you’ll protect me, then this place will be your house, and I will give you a tenth of everything I have”. But for the next 30 years of his life, even though God keeps his part of the bargain, Jacob basically puts his life on autopilot and pretty much forgets his promise.

When Jacob, the cheater, gets to Laban’s home, he gets a little of his own medicine. He falls in love with Rachel, the younger daughter, but after working for Laban for seven years, Laban substitutes his older daughter, Leah, for Rachel on the wedding night. So, Jacob ends up working another 7 years for Laban in order to take Rachel as his wife, too.

Jacob ends up serving Laban for another 6 years after he marries Rachel. During his time with Laban, 11 sons and a daughter are born to Jacob – six sons and a daughter by Leah, 2 sons by Leah’s servant Zilpah, 2 sons by Rachel’s servant, Bilhah, and one son by Rachel.

Time came that Jacob had an issue towards Laban’s son, and he also noticed that Laban had already changed. Then in verse 3 of chapter 31, God comes to Jacob and tells him to return to the land of his fathers and promises to be with him. In verse 13 of that same chapter, God reminded him to go back to Bethel where he made his vow and return also to his kindred. So, Jacob takes his family and livestock and leaves Paddan-aran. On the way, he finds out that his brother Esau is coming to meet him, and he develops an elaborate plan to try and preserve his family since he assumes Esau is coming to kill him. (He assumed because he knew in his heart that he made a mistake against his brother)

That night Jacob wrestles with God, and God changes his name from Jacob – cheater – to Israel – which means “He strives with God”. But what is interesting is that throughout the next several chapters of Genesis, up to the passage that we’ll read in just a moment, he is still called Jacob, and not Israel. As we’ll see, that seems to be because Jacob still isn’t ready to live his life intentionally for God.

The next morning, Esau comes with 400 men, but instead of attacking Jacob, he embraces him. But instead of going home to the land of his people as God had commanded, Jacob stops in the city of Shechem and buys a piece of land there and pitches his tent.

That turns out to be a very poor decision because there in Shechem, Jacob’s daughter, Dinah, is violated by the son of Hamor, the prince of the land. And in his usual “hands off” approach to life, Jacob hears about this atrocity but really doesn’t do anything to address it. But his sons devise a plan to seek revenge and Simeon and Levi kill all the males in the city. Jacob actually rebukes them because now he is afraid that the Canaanites and Perizzites are going to come and attack him.

That brings us to this morning’s passage in Genesis 35

https://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/jacob

 

LESSON OUTLINE:

1.  WE MUST RETURN TO THE ALTAR (GENESIS 35:1)

And God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to Bethel, and dwell there: and make there an altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when thou fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother.

 

Thirty years have no passed since Jacob first made his vow to God there at Bethel – twenty years serving Laban and another 10 years in the ungodly city of Shechem. But after 30 years Jacob finally decides to come home to God.

 

Herbert Jackson, a foreign missionary, describes how, when he was newly "out in the field," he was assigned an automobile that wouldn't start without a push. So, for two years he got someone to push-start his car in the morning so he could get going. Then all day, as Jackson made his rounds in his mission station, he either kept the motor running or parked the car on a hill. That way he could be certain to get it going again.

After pondering his problem, he devised a plan. He went to the school near his home, got permission to take some children out of class, and had them push his car off. As he made his rounds, he would either park on a hill or leave his car running. He used this ingenious procedure to two years. Ill health forced the Jackson family to leave, and a new missionary came to that station. When Jackson proudly began to explain his arrangement for getting the car started, the new man began looking under the hood. Before the explanation was complete, the new missionary interrupted, “Why Dr. Jackson, I believe the only trouble is this loose cable.” He gave the cable a twist, stepped into the car, pushed the switch, and to Jackson’s astonishment, the engine roared to life. For two years, needless trouble had become routine. The power was there all the time. Only a loose connection kept Jackson from putting the power to work. Like us, Christians, we have the power, but the connection is lost. Like the internet connection, even the Wi-Fi is okay, but your Wi-Fi connection is turned off in your phone, you cannot connect to your loved ones.

Back to our lesson, from outward appearances Jacob was not that far from God—only thirty miles distant from Bethel. He had also built an altar at Shechem (33:20), so there must have been some kind of religious observance there. Spiritually, however, Jacob was not near to God at all. Jacob told Esau he would meet him at Seir (33:14), but he went the opposite direction to Succoth, then to Shechem. Jacob somewhat passively accepted the rape of his daughter and even entered into an agreement whereby the purity of the covenant people of God would be lost (chapter 34). Jacob was preoccupied with prosperity and security at the expense of purity and piety. He is near Bethel but not near to the God of Bethel—at least not in chapter 34.

Jacob’s condition is not that different from many Christians in our own time. We may appear to be walking close to God while the opposite is true. We may still continue to preserve the forms and observe the rituals of piety, but, in fact, the reality is not there. Paul described this condition as “…holding to a form of godliness, although they have denied its power…” (II Timothy 3:5). We may be like those in the church at Ephesus, who have “lost their first love” (Revelation 2:4), or those at Laodicea who, due to their wealth and security, considered themselves to be doing well spiritually when they were destitute, cold, and indifferent (Revelation 3:15-17).

 

2.  WE NEED TO PUT AWAY THE DISTRACTIONS (GENESIS 31:30; 35:2,4)

Then Jacob said unto his household, and to all that were with him, Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be clean, and change your garments:

 

One of the problems hinders us in the way back to God is the distractions of the world along the way. We can’t give up the pleasures and idols we have with the world. Jacob’s family only got right with God after Jacob himself did. This again shows us the tremendous leadership role men have within the family. A man resisting God will see the same effect in his children. A man who gets right with God will also see the effect in his family.

·       Jacob’s children kept foreign gods because their mother did. Rachel kept the household idols of her father (Genesis 31:19). No matter how hard we try to teach our children godly conduct, they will continue to do what we do.

·       “In families it is often well, when you see that things are wrong, just to call the household together and say, ‘We must draw near unto God with peculiar earnestness, for we are going astray. We have not given up family prayer, but we must now make it special, and with double zeal draw nigh unto God.’ I am afraid that some of you neglect family prayer. If you do, I am sure it will work evil in your households.” (Spurgeon)

In Genesis 31:32 Jacob said, “With whomsoever thou findest thy gods, let him not live: before our brethren discern thou what is thine with me, and take it to thee. For Jacob knew not that Rachel had stolen them”Despite of the reminders of Jacob to get rid of their idols, still, Rachel got and kept them.

Jacob mentioned to change their garments. This was an important step, both literally and as a symbol of something spiritual. Jacob wanted them to be cleaned up and in their best frame of mind to come before the God they had neglected.

 

3.  YOU’LL FACE HEARTACHES ALONG THE WAY (GENESIS 31:30; 35:2,4)

God had spoken to Jacob ten years before at Peniel, but not since, as far as the text reveals. During that time, Jacob had become comfortable in his partial obedience in Shechem. Then the tragedies of Dinah’s rape and his sons’ bloody revenge shook Jacob out of his complacency. Suddenly, he was ready to listen, and God spoke again. In verse 1, the Lord brings to Jacob’s mind how He had appeared to him when he fled from Esau. In verse 3, Jacob refers to that time as the day of his distress. It often takes a day of distress to get our attention so that we’ll snap out of our spiritual slump.

But then we mistakenly think that since we’ve turned the corner and now, we’re obeying God that He will give us (or even owes us) a trouble‑free life. But obedience to God doesn’t mean that He will reward us with a life free from trials. It’s often the trials that keep us clinging to Him so that we don’t fall back into another slump. It’s significant that in this chapter which records Jacob’s spiritual recovery, there are no less than four tragedies which bring sorrow into Jacob’s life.

·       The first is the death of Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse (35:8). She was only mentioned before (not by name) when she left Haran with Rebekah, who was going to marry Isaac (24:59). If she had cared for Rebekah as an infant, she would be very old by now, probably about 170. It is not revealed when she joined Jacob’s company, but her presence probably indicates that Rebekah had died sometime during Jacob’s years in Haran. As close as he was to his mother, the death of her beloved nurse would have been tough for Jacob. The name given to Deborah’s burial place, “The Oak of Weeping,” shows his grief.

·       The second sorrow to hit Jacob was the greatest of his life: his beloved Rachel died in childbirth (35:16‑20). (Jacob’s journey from Bethel toward Hebron was probably not a violation of God’s command in 35:1, which meant, “Stay at Bethel long enough to fulfill your vows.” See also the command in 31:3.) Jacob had loved Rachel at first sight. He had worked seven years for her and then, when he got cheated with Leah, he worked seven more for Rachel. Although his grief is passed over in Genesis 35, it is revealed about 40 years later, when Jacob on his deathbed poignantly recalls, “... when I came from Paddan, Rachel died, to my sorrow, in the land of Canaan on the journey, ... and I buried her there on the way to Ephrath” (Gen. 48:7).

·       Jacob’s third sorrow is mentioned on the heels of Rachel’s death: Reuben, his firstborn son, committed incest with Rachel’s maid, Bilhah, Jacob’s concubine. This was probably Reuben’s attempt to grab the family inheritance for himself, much as Absalom in his rebellion publicly went in to David’s concubines, and Adonijah later attempted to usurp power from his brother, Solomon, with the same scheme. Reuben’s crass sin must have stung Jacob deeply (Gen. 49:3-4).

·       Jacob’s final sorrow in this chapter is the death of his aged father, Isaac. The text might make us think that Jacob arrived just before Isaac’s death. But from other chronological notices in Genesis, we learn that Jacob lived in Hebron with Isaac about twelve years before Isaac died. But Isaac’s death is presented here to wrap up this part of Jacob’s history. It was another sorrow for Jacob, as another link with the past was removed.

https://bible.org/seriespage/lesson-62-getting-out-spiritual-slump

 

The point is that coming out of a spiritual slump doesn’t guarantee that life ahead will be rosy. Obedience doesn’t mean a trouble‑free life. But in the inevitable trials God uses to shake us out of spiritual indifference and to keep us trusting Him, we have the God of Jacob as “our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble” (Ps. 46:1, 7, 11). Trials can either make us self-focused or God-focused. If we allow the trials to help us put God back in the rightful center of our lives, we will recover from a spiritual slump, as Jacob did.

 

4.  GOD’S BLESSING AND GUIDANCE ARE ALWAYS THERE.

In Genesis 28: 13 – God appeared to Jacob’s dream and promised to his seed.

In Genesis 30:41 – Jacob’s cattle, servants, asses and camels grew exceedingly.

Genesis 31:12 – Jacob was tricked by Laban but God guided and blessed him.

Genesis 31:29 – God spoke to Laban not to harm Jacob.

In Genesis 35:5 – the terror of God was upon the cities that were round about them, and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob.

 

Then God appeared to Jacob again when he came from Paddan-aram, and He blessed him. And God said to him, “Your name is Jacob; You shall no longer be called Jacob, But Israel shall be your name.” Thus He called him Israel. God also said to him, “I am God Almighty; Be fruitful and multiply; A nation and a company of nations shall come from you, And kings shall come forth from you. And the land which I gave to Abraham and Isaac, I will give it to you, And I will give the land to your descendants after you.” Then God went up from him in the place where He had spoken with him. And Jacob set up a pillar in the place where He had spoken with him, a pillar of stone, and he poured out a libation on it; he also poured oil on it. So Jacob named the place where God had spoken with him, Bethel (Genesis 35:9-15).

 

CONLUSION:

There are times in our life when we must stop and reconsider our relationship with the Lord, and we find that we need to recommit, rededicate, and return to the Lord. Without the daily interaction with the Lord, we have a tendency to do things the way we want to or the way we feel would best suit our situation. However, our ways are not always the Lord’s ways.

 

Jacob’s renewal at Bethel necessitated several actions on Jacob’s part. First, he came to the point where he stopped going his own sinful way and once again obeyed that which he knew to be the will of God. There cannot be renewal without obedience. Second, there cannot be renewal without separation. Jacob put away those foreign gods which he had so long tolerated, and which were so offensive to God. Finally, Jacob’s renewal involved reconciliation with those who had been injured and offended by his sins. We cannot be reconciled to God without being reconciled with men (cf. Matthew 5:23-24).

 






Monday, March 17, 2025

WALKING TOGETHER (LEVITICUS 26:1-12; AMOS 3:3)

 

WALKING TOGETHER

BIBLE PASSAGE: LEVITICUS 26: 1-12, 27; AMOS 3:3

Picture taken from Google

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

Lesson ideas taken from: https://www.biblestudytools.com/

MARCH 07, 2021

MEMORY VERSE

And I will walk among you, and will be your God, and ye shall be my people

LEVITICUS 26:12

 

INTRODUCTION:

Who do you want to walk with? I remember when I was in my early years of being a Christian, we used to walk on our way home, no matter how far it was. An industrious young people accompanied all the girls on their way home and that was he was doing after Gospel Hour Service. It was also one way of saving money for transportation because lot of young people had not given money by their parents in going to church at that time. It was okay doing this because you love the fellowship of the believers. Back to the question, do we want strangers or someone we love?  How about in spiritual life, do we want to walk with unbelievers or with God?

Our subject today is, "Walking with God, or Separating from the World." Of course, this address is to those that have been redeemed by the precious blood of Christ; for no man has a desire to walk with God until he is saved. For six thousand years, since Adam fell out of communion with God, God has been trying to win back the sons and daughters of Adam into communion with himself. When Adam was innocent of sin, he could walk with God; but the moment he fell, he ran away and hid himself and was out of communion with God. When men are going away from God, they do not desire to walk with him; but after we have become his children, the sweetest lesson we can learn is how to walk with him in constant fellowship, how to be in communion with him all the while. In line with this, let’s see what the advantages of walking with GOD are.

 

LESSON OUTLINE:

1.  WALKING WITH GOD MAKES US PROSPER (LEV. 26: 12, 27-28)

And I will walk among you, and will be your God, and ye shall be my people. And if ye will not for all this hearken unto me, but walk contrary unto me; Then I will walk contrary unto you also in fury; and I, even I, will chastise you seven times for your sins.

 

Remember the Israelites when they chose for a king instead of a prophet, ordained by the Lord, to guide them? We can see that they had free will to decide.

Now if nations will not walk with God, it is the privilege of individuals to do so; and each one of us in this house can be brought into communion with God, and walk with him the rest of our days, if we will. It says in 1 Peter 2:20-21 says, "For what glory is it if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? but if when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently, this is acceptable with God, For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow in his steps."

 

Now if you read the history of that nation, you will find that as long as they kept the law, they prospered which means they walk with God. He gave them the rain in season, and God caused their land to bring forth abundance; but when they turned away from him and would not reverence his law, then they brought calamity upon themselves, and they were taken into bondage and servitude. Nebuchadnezzar took them into bondage and kept them for seventy years, because they would not reverence the law. Now it says in that same chapter, 12th verse: "And I will walk among you and will be your God, and you shall be my people." He said, I will come down among you, and you shall be my people, and I shall be your God. And what nation had a God like that? What nation was blessed like that nation, when God was walking with them? If they were in battle, God sent legions of angels to help them if they put their trust in him. But then he warns them in the 27th verse: "And if ye will not for all this hearken unto me, but walk contrary unto me, then I will walk contrary unto you also in fury; and I, even I, will chastise you seven times for your sins."

 

This is a walk with GOD: "Enoch walked with God." This Is not an ordinary walk, and you do not keep company with the ordinary. You are walking with God. However strange it may seem to our finite minds, it is possible, according to the Word of God, to live in the realm of the Spirit and walk in fellowship with the heavenly Father. Enoch’s walk emphasizes an Important relationship between humanity and divinity, between God and man, between that which Is weak and limited, and that which Is powerful and unlimited. Think of the high and holy privilege of walking with God. What an exciting thought that I can walk with God. 1 John 1:7 says, “But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.”

The walk of which the Bible speaks means you have discovered the road of truth. The quest for truth is as old as the human race. Pilate was not the first man to ask, "What is truth?" Men of every generation have asked that question. The followers of Buddha have answered it by saying truth is following the teachings of Buddha. The disciples of Confucius have answered it by saying, truth is observing the teachings of Confucius. The devotees of the Prophet Mohammed have answered it by saying Allah is God and Mohammed is his prophet. But the voice of Jesus Christ speaks loud and clear above all others as he declares, "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No man comes to God except by me."

Some people say, "Let’s be broad-minded. All roads lead to heaven. You go your way, and I’ll go mine and we’ll arrive at the same destination." But the truth reveals there is only one way to heaven. The Bible says it is a narrow way; it has a strait gate, and only a few will find it.

Others have said it doesn’t really matter what you believe so long as you are sincere in believing it. But I beg to differ with such an opinion. Sincerity is commendable only so long as it is based on truth. I have no doubt that Adolph Hitler was a sincere man. He believed in what he was doing and sold a nation on it. Jim Jones with his cult in South America was sincere-but his sincerity could not be commended when he coaxed or forced nearly 1000 people to commit suicide in the name of religion. It does matter what you believe. Our faith must be based upon truth.

The psalmist says, "Teach me thy way, O Lord, I will walk in thy truth: unite my heart to fear thy name" (86:11).

Let’s read some spiritual quotes from famous people - “Those who walk with God, always reach their destination.” ― Henry Ford

“If I walk with the world, I can’t walk with God.”  Dwight L. Moody

2.  YOU WON’T LOSE POWER; GOD WALKS WITH YOU (AMOS 3:3)

Can two walk together, except they be agreed?

In electrical terms, lose power means when the electrical power goes out unexpectedly.  A power outage may:

·       Disrupt communications, water and transportation.

·       Close retail businesses, grocery stores, gas stations, ATMs, banks and other services.

·       Cause food spoilage and water contamination.

·       Prevent use of medical devices

Spiritual losing power means you are not in the light; you can fight back the influence of this world. We need to walk with God. THIS IS A WALK OF FAITH: The Bible says that Enoch had this testimony that "he pleased God" (Hebrews 11:5). How was Enoch able to please God? The writer of Hebrews tells us that "without faith it is impossible to please [God]" (11:6). Enoch could walk with God because he was a man of faith and placed his trust in God. God is a big God. He is the God of the maximum and not the minimum; the God of might and miracle. He is the God of unlimited power, and He will reveal Himself to us if we believe and trust Him. He will shake heaven and earth in order to reveal His glory and power to His people.

In 2 Corinthians 3:5 Paul says, "Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think anything as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is of God." Paul never glories in the flesh but ascribes the winning of life’s battles to "Him that loved us."

·       Walking in faith means walking in power for God is power. His power is at work in us and through us and for us. This being true, our lives do not have to be sick and anemic, but we can be men and women of faith keenly aware of the adequacy of divine grace for every need. In Ephesians 1:19 Paul states, ". . . according to the working of his mighty power." Other phrases in his letters such as "the effectual working of his power" (Ephesians 3:7) and again "to Him that is of power to stablish you" (Romans 16:25)-these and fifty other passages give us authority to echo Paul’s words, "Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might." (Ephesians 6:10)

 

·       Walking by faith also means growing in Christ. In Colossians 2:6, 7 we read, "As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him, Rooted and built up in him and stablished in the faith, as ye have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving."

In this one passage Paul talks about four elements of the Christian experience. Walking-Growing- Building- and Abounding.

Walking expresses Life.

Growing expresses an inner power.

 

·       When we walk with God by faith, we will also experience intimate fellowship with Him. "What a fellowship, what a joy divine, Leaning on the everlasting arms . . . I have blessed peace, with my Lord so near, Leaning on the everlasting arms." We have discovered, as did Enoch, that walking and living in the presence of God is an experience of blessed fellowship and sweet communion.

We read in the chapter 3 of Amos, 3rd verse: "Can two walk together, except they be agreed?" If you see a man that is in communion with another man, you say, those two men agree pretty well. If you see two businessmen that go to their stores together every morning, you say they agree; and if they do not have fellowship with one another, you do not have the same impression. If a man is going to walk with God, he has got to agree with God. He has got to give up his own thoughts and ways; for God is above us and is not going to give up his ways to walk with us. What is the first thing you notice if a person is a Christian or not? For me, a person’s lifestyles – we don’t know how they talk but we can already see their lifestyle – vices like smoking and in appearance – piercing and other worldly getups. Let’s take this example - Suppose I walk with a man to a bank, and while he breaks in and steals $100,000, I wait for him and then walk off with him. The police get hold of us, and they make no difference between us. I walked to that bank with him and walked away with him; and I am just as bad as that man. If we are going to be hand and glove with the ungodly, there is no difference between us.

Let us look at chapter 11 of Numbers and on the 13th and 14th verse. I think that gives us another view of this truth, and how it is we have lost our power. "And the mixed multitude that was among them fell a lusting: and the children of Israel also wept again, and said, “Who shall give us flesh to eat? We remember the flesh that we did eat in Egypt freely, the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic. But now our soul is dried away; there is nothing at all, besides this manna, before our eyes." What a sad picture that was. God gave them angels' food, bread from heaven; and they hated it. Why? On account of the mixed multitude, they got in with the world, with unbelievers, and they began to talk against the manna and about the onions, and leeks and garlics which they ate down in Egypt. What do you see to-day? Men hate/dislike the Bible; men don't love this bread which has come down from heaven, which feeds our souls; they run off to operas and theatres, and the world has come into the church. They hate the manna which God has sent them from heaven, on account of this mixed multitude.

“God’s mighty power comes when God’s people learn to walk with God.”  Jack Hyles

CONLUSION:

It is always a pleasant experience to walk with someone you love. We should love walking with God. There are some wonderful things that God, our walking companion, does for us as we put our trust in Him. I want to mention three. He guides us, He comforts us, and He protects us as we walk together.

First, He is our Guide. The psalmist wrote, "For this God is our God for ever and ever: he will be our guide even unto death" (48:14). That’s a wonderful promise. Life can be a frustrating journey. It has many uncertain turns. I, for one, need a trusty guide and friend to show me the way. When you take a journey with a capable and trusted guide, you can leave your worries behind. He arranges the details of the Journey. He knows the destination because he has been there before; all you have to do is go with him, listen to him, and follow his instructions.

Martin Luther once said, "I know not the way God leads me, but well do I know my Guide." He can always be trusted. Thank God our traveling companion is Trustworthy-He knows the way, He knows the pitfalls, and He erases worry from our minds when we put the details of the journey in His hands.

Second, our walking companion also gives us comfort and strength for each traveling day. The Bible says in Deuteronomy 33:25, "As thy days, so shall thy strength be." These words were part of a blessing Moses pronounced upon the tribe of Asher, but they stand as a testimony of God’s faithfulness to all His people. We sometimes wonder if the demands of life will be too heavy for the circuits. Will we make it? But the answer of the Word of God is, "As your days may demand, so shall your strength be." God has promised that when you walk, you will never walk alone. He is with you. He reminds us, "They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint" (Isaiah 40:31).

God said follow me and it means he is walking before you therefore, “Don’t worry God has gone before you and prepared the way. Just keep walking.” (Remember pastor rod had said this)

Third, our walking companion also protects us on our journey. The psalmist declares, "The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower. I will call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised: so, shall I be saved from mine enemies" (Psalm 18:2-3).

When we hear these words, we recognize God as the defender and protector of His people-an ever-present help in the time of trouble. David says God is like a great fortress whose walls cannot be penetrated by the enemy. He also says God is my coat of armor and shield against the arrows that come my way. He is the strength of my life. When I would be faint and weary, He refreshes and restores me.

Let me say this quote, “Smart men walked on the moon, daring men walked on the ocean floor, but wise men walk with God.” Leonard Ravenhill

How many times have we thought we would perish on our journey? How many times have we thought we would die in the heat of the battle? But God raised up a standard against our enemy. When the enemy came in like a flood, God raised up His army against him. God protects His people from the enemy and surrounds them with His loving care. Thank God for His watchful, caring, loving protection, along the journey of life.

Let’s be reminded that “THE MORE YOU WALK WITH GOD, THE HARDER IT IS TO SCRAPE YOUR KNEE.”

 





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