“In GOD We Trust”
(This is a repost from a few
years ago, but still holds true)
Like most of you I’ve been watching what’s been going on in this country
and asking myself why doesn’t someone do something? No we aren’t as bad off as
some we know, neither I nor my wife (Darlin Anne) have a lot in the market. We
have a 401k and my pension is most likely in there.
Now I get a lot of magazines and I do a lot of
reading on different subjects, that being said, I’m not a master of any one
thing but I do have a working knowledge of a lot of different things.
So, anyway I was reading this news letter and
it had a very interesting article in it about what is going on now in our
country. I have to warn you that this news letter is a Biblical perspective on
current events.
If you’re not a religious person or you don’t
believe in a GOD then this is not for you. However if you are a person of faith
then you might find the following article interesting.
I’m not going to say anymore, because I don’t
and won’t debate about weather there is or isn’t a GOD, with anyone, this is
not the place for that.
Otherwise go forward, the article follows.
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"In God We
Trust"
Like many Americans, almost all of my life I have carried coins in my
pocket. These small pieces of metal make a statement about trust. No, it's not
trust in a bank or in what else lies in our pockets! For our readers who may
not know or have forgotten, the statement engraved on American coins is just
four simple words with profound ramifications, "In God We Trust."
Of course, the economic crisis is affecting nations around the world,
not just the United States.
Perhaps more than ever, at least in my lifetime, we are being dynamically
challenged to turn our attention from what lies in our pockets to what lies in
our hearts regarding the source of our ultimate provisions.
Long ago, the firebrand of the American Revolution, Thomas Paine, spoke
of the times that he lived in as "the times that try men's souls."
While Paine was talking about 1775, his words are still true today!
Time
to talk!
Many of us see our financial retirement portfolios evaporating. Others
are experiencing a job loss or a cutback in hours. Those on fixed incomes are
trying to stretch their pennies yet further, but there may be nothing left to
stretch or squeeze. These are amazing times in which we live! It is time to
talk! And frankly there is nothing better to talk about than God's promises of
a stable mooring in unsettled times.
Long ago, God offered certain promises to a people if they would honor
Him and place Him first in their minds and hearts.
He told the newly established nation of Israel, "Now it shall come to
pass, if you diligently obey the voice of the LORD your God, to observe
carefully all His commandments which I command you today, that the LORD your
God will set you high above all nations of the earth. And all these blessings
shall come upon you and overtake you, because you obey the voice of the LORD
your God: Blessed shall you be in the city, and blessed shall you be in the
country" (Deuteronomy 28: 1-3).
The people of Israel were granted the privilege of collectively living
out "In God We Trust." And God did bless ancient Israel! But the
people of Israel
do not have a monopoly on God's attention. God honors all individuals, families
and nations who honor Him. It is noteworthy that God states the blessings would
"overtake you," indicating when God wants to bless you, there is no
way of running away from His blessings.
A tale of two cities
Now, fast-forward to our time. The United States has been a "land
of milk and honey." But now, why this dramatic turn of events? What is it
within the American personality that has brought us to this financial mess? The
answer lies in understanding the conflicting pulls within the American psyche
symbolized by "a tale of two cities." No! Not London and Paris as in Charles Dickens' story, but Plymouth and New York City.
Religious separatists settled Plymouth
as a religious haven devoted to the worship of God. On the other hand, New York (New Amsterdam) was founded as a gateway to trade, finance
and pleasure.
Since those early times, America
has always had a dual personality with conflicting drives. Amazingly, these
opposite poles of spiritual heart and precious metal come together in American
coins imprinted with "In God We Trust." The question is which is more
real? What we hold in our hands or what is imprinted in our hearts?
Today, we find America
increasingly turning away from the values of the Scriptures. Unfortunately, the
Ten Commandments have become the "Ten Suggestions" for far too many.
Increasingly this God-blessed birthright nation has moved away from a society
with freedom of religion to an increasingly sad country with freedom from religion. Thus,
its moral fabric has weakened.
Rather than people living before their God and living within their
means, we have chosen New York
over Plymouth
as a national model.
Let's realize for every cause there is an effect. We read in Deuteronomy
28:43-44 how a blessed nation that turns from its God-given birthright would
have foreigners lending to them, and "he shall be the head, and you shall
be the tail." Did I hear China?
What is made plain from the biblical record is that when God either
withdraws His blessings or punishes a system that confronts Him, it can happen
overnight. Revelation 18:10, 17, 19, mentions three times how the final
culmination of the Babylonian system headed by "the beast" is going
to fall in "one hour."
Much of this same chapter is devoted to describing the mercantile and
voracious financial habits of this system opposed to God. It describes how
those invested in this corrupt regime will weep over its demise and wonder how
this could have happened.
Verse 17 chillingly describes how "in one hour such great riches
came to nothing." Such words, right now, are almost too close to home,
aren't, they? But it shows how quickly matters can change (the implication of
those words, "one hour").
No spiritual golden parachutes
What is equally loud in the! Scriptures is the fact that God has not chosen
to fully isolate His followers from this world. In His final prayer on the
night of His betrayal, Christ plainly spoke these words: "I do not pray
that You should take them out of this world, but that You should keep them from
the evil one"! (John 17:15).
What? No offer of a spiritual, golden parachute from the ills of this corruptive
society? Scripture reminds us of a different reality. The faithful patriarchs
of Genesis had to endure famine and be on the move. The children of Israel went
through the first three plagues visited upon Egypt. The apostolic Church of Jerusalem suffered from famine alongside
their Jewish countrymen. Each in turn had to learn "In God We Trust."
Each generation of covenant people has to learn to pray for their
"daily bread" (Matthew 6:11).
Each generation of faith-driven folk has to come to grips with whether their
riches are in God or in treasure they have laid up for themselves. Jesus advised
that "he who lays up treasure for himself. ..is not rich toward God"
(Luke 12:21).
The psalmist David makes a powerful observation regarding those who
honor God and have "In God We Trust" embedded in their hearts and not
only on the coins in their pocket. David comments, "The steps of a good
man are ordered by the LORD, and He delights in his way. Though he fall, he
shall not be utterly cast down; for the LORD upholds him with His hand. I have
been young, and now am old; yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his
descendants begging bread" (Psalm 37:23-25).
Please notice that David didn't say "begging for steak," but
for bread. In other words, our basic life needs would be provided. This is the
same David, who in utmost confidence, declared, "The LORD is my shepherd,
I shall not want" (Psalm 23:1). He knew even in calamitous times that He
was never alone or forgotten.
How's your faith temperature doing right now with so much stirring in
this boiling cauldron of global financial insecurity?
Taking a "faith
check"
Let's take a "faith check" by squarely facing the words of the
greatest Shepherd of all. Jesus challenges and comforts us at the same time in
Matthew 6:25-33:
"Do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will
drink; nor about your body, what you will put on. Is not life more than food
and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air, for they neither
sow nor reap nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are
you not of more value than they? Which of you by worrying can add one cubit to
his stature? So why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies of the
field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin and yet I say to you that even
Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
"Now if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is, and
tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will He not much more clothe you, O you of
little faith? Therefore do not worry, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What
shall we drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' For after all these things the
Gentiles seek. For your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.
"But seek first the kingdom
of God and His
righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you. Therefore do not
worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient
for the day is its own trouble."
When I mention a faith check, that doesn't mean that we will simply passively
sit back and do nothing. Of course not! God helps those who help themselves.
Neither does that mean that, as we are confronted with challenging
circumstances, our knees won't be shaking. That's natural. But there is a
difference between having shaky knees and a shaky heart. Because it is in such
times we discover whether "In God We Trust" is simply engraved on our
coins or etched into our character.
Oh yes, we have every privilege to be concerned and to responsibly
respond where and as we can, but we have no God-given responsibility to be
worried. That is homegrown down here below!
Herbert Lockyer dissects worry best when he says, "Worry produces doubt
in a threefold direction. 1) God's love is doubted. Worry implies that He cares
little for His blood-washed children. 2) God's wisdom is doubted. Worry indicates
that He is not able to plan for His own, that He does not know what is best for
them who belong to Him. 3) God's power is doubted. Worry says His grace is not
sufficient for our needs."
Is your spiritual stock on the
rise?
As the global markets turn and churn, please understand one thing. You
are not lost in this picture and God knows right where you are. In fact, your
stock may be on the rise. While our financial portfolios may shrink, it has
given all of us an opportunity to raise our spiritual portfolios by dealing in
the currency of faith underlined in the reality that indeed "In God We
Trust." Yes, it has been a time for all of us to go back to basics and
consider the foundation upon which we invest.
It is the words of David that offer us guidance on that path laid before
us of "This is the way, walk in it" (Isaiah 30:21). He simply put it
this way in Psalm 37:3: "Trust in the LORD, and do good; dwell in the land,
and feed on His faithfulness." If you wanted to abbreviate it and put it
on a coin, you might just say, "In God We
Trust." Better still-etch it in your heart.
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