Written by Marcia HallPsalm 37:31 “The law of their God is in their heart. None of their steps will slip.”
Romans 7:22 “For I delight in the law of God according to the inner man…” 2 Corinthians 3: 2 & 3 “You are our letter written in our hearts, known, and read by all men. For you are prominently declared to be the letter of Christ, prepared by us, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the Living God, not on tablets of stone but on human tablets of the heart.” Paul spent 18 months with the Corinthians. He built tents and worked among them daily, teaching and ministering to them. He personally saw their spiritual growth and knew that they had been a letter of sorts, written and read by the people of Corinth and its local Church. Their testimony rang out and the people were “written” on Paul’s heart because of it. Verse 3 “For you are prominently declared to be the letter of Christ prepared by us written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God, not written on tablets of stone but on human tablets of the heart.” God our Father has stated in Hebrews 8:10 … I will put My laws into their minds and write them on their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be My people. Written on our hearts, a letter, to those we encounter. That they may read and know the love of the Father who is searching for them to come home to Him. As we rely on God’s sufficiency, He makes us able ministers to proclaim the Good News transforming us into a letter written on His heart. Is your life a letter? Are you written in the hearts of those who taught you and to those you encounter? LORD, Yahweh, show me how I can become a letter written on Your heart so that it can be known and read by all men. Let me be a living testament of Your Goodness and Grace. Let me reflect Your lovingkindness so that men, women, and children, will come to the saving knowledge of Jesus. Use me, Lord. In Jesus Name Amen.
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A devotion by Katie Guerin Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand The story of Jesus feeding the five thousand is fairly well known. The first thing I notice is that the crowd of people were following Jesus "because they saw the signs he had performed by healing the sick". The people had not yet accepted him as the Messiah, but they were very interested in his miracles. We tend to do that too. Do we really believe in Jesus as our savior and Lord? or do we simply want to use him as a genie that might grant our wish to be healed, or have a bad situation fixed, or to find a relationship?
Interestingly, Jesus knows this about the crowd of people and he does something surprising. He feeds them. He doesn't berate them or lecture them about their motives. He simply feeds them. That brings us to the next part of the passage; Jesus' disciples asking how in the world they're going to feed so many people! Five thousand men, plus their families. There were possibly over ten thousand people in the crowd! Even in our day and age, feeding over ten thousand people is a huge undertaking. In Jesus' time, people were fed according to their class. Men before women, rich before poor, healthy before ill. Jesus did something unprecedented and fed every single person at the same time, and they ate their fill. Then there was food left over! Jesus came to give us life and life more abundantly. Jesus takes what we have and multiplies it. He uses our small talents and our small capacity for love or generosity or compassion and he multiplies it so that it can be used to feed thousands. What's more, we aren't bound by a social class system or by what society thinks of us. We are given life by Jesus, and we are all seen as equals to him when we accept his free gift of salvation. |
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