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God Meant
It For Good
by Jon Walker
“… You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order
to bring about this present result …” (Genesis 50:20 NIV)
Editor’s note – Although
I know we offered this devotional recently, it teaches the absolute necessity
for applying our faith to the past, to the present, and to the future. How will
you allow the living water from Christ’s fountain to flow this year into the
deepest crevices of your memories, fears, anxieties, and hopes? – jw
The life of Joseph was anything but peaceful. It was filled with
youthful folly, broken dreams, and the mean-spirited actions of others. Yet he
remained a man remarkable for his lack of bitterness or regret, always seeing
God as the “Great Engineer” behind even the worst of circumstances.
In a final confrontation with his brothers, he graciously noted,
“You meant it for bad; God meant it for good.”
The theology packed in that statement is astounding. ‘God meant
it for good means –
You can accept the past – No sin, no action, no choice on your part
is too big for God to handle – or too big to be worked for the good of those
who love him and are called according to his name. Just ask Joseph. Better yet,
ask his fearful and famished brothers, who were forced to rely on him for
survival.
You can embrace the present – There’s no need to play the ‘what if’ game.
The past is gone, and no energy you expend will ever change it. The future is
in God's omnipotent hands, so you’re free to focus on the present. Your job is
to love God with all your heart, soul, and mind, trusting him to forgive the
past and transform the future. Martyred missionary Jim Eliot once wrote,
“Wherever you are, be all there,” not living in the
past and not fantasizing about the future. God wants you in the present because
that’s where his grace will flow.
You can look expectantly toward the future – Even if you make
mistakes today, God still controls your future. Walking in the Spirit, you can
live life to the fullest, unafraid of making mistakes and unconcerned you may stumble
into some terrible circumstance that takes you out of God's control. Even when
things appear to be terrible, you can trust that God is working out some divine
plan through you.
What does this mean?
· No matter how bad things get – God is still able to bring good out
of it. Today, thank God that nothing – no disaster, no delay – is bigger that
his ability to turn it into something good and godly.
· Thank God and let go – Thank God that he is sovereign over your
past, your present, and your future. Give God the circumstances, disasters,
hindrances, hurts, and sins from your past. Give God your current situation,
your disasters, hindrances, hurts, and sins of today. Praise God that he can
work anything in your future for godly good, that you can walk in confidence
that there is nothing anyone can do to you, or anything you can do that will be
beyond the reach of God’s Grace and redemption.
· Look for God’s hand – Walking by faith means you see God’s hand
even in the most difficult of circumstances. You trust in his ability and his
willingness to transform the bad into godly good. God is not limited by
people’s motives. In other words, it does not matter why someone hurt you; God
can still transform a deliberate, mean-spirited situation into something for
his good.
· What will you allow God to change? – There it is: some
situation, or event, or person in your life who, as far as you can tell, “meant
it for bad.” How do you think God meant it for good? Ask God what he wants you
to do with this situation (event or person). When he answers, do it.
Believing
Your Uniqueness
by Jon Walker
“The most important thing is that I complete my mission, the
work that the Lord Jesus gave me – to tell people the Good News about God's
grace.” (Acts 20:24 NCV)
God gave you a unique role to play in his Kingdom.
You’re the only person in the world who can live your particular
life for the glory of God. There is no one else in the world with your unique
mix of spiritual gifts, passions, abilities, personality, and experiences. God
shaped you for a very specific ministry, and no one else can fulfill your
mission.
Paul writes: “The most important thing is that I complete my mission,
the work that the Lord Jesus gave me – to tell people the Good News about God's
grace” (Acts 20:24 NCV). God doesn’t want us to waste a precious minute of our
lives doing things that don’t matter – if the most important thing we can do is
left undone.
It’s never too late to move faithfully into your mission for
God. You may think you don’t have any skills God can use, but the truth is God
would never send you on a mission without making sure you had everything you
needed – including your unique S.H.A.P.E.
He sends you with his Spirit, the Holy Spirit, inside you to
guide you.
What does this mean?
· Let’s not waste God’s grace – The apostle Paul writes, “But because God
was so gracious, so very generous, here I am. And I'm not about to let his
grace go to waste. Haven't I worked hard trying to do more than any of the
others? Even then, my work didn't amount to all that much. It was God giving me
the work to do, God giving me the energy to do it.” (1 Corinthians 15:10 MSG)
· What if it’s true? – How would you live differently if you
really believed God had created you for a unique mission, one that only you
could accomplish?