EVERYDAY IN THE WORD!
SATURDAY JANUARY 07, 2023.
SUBJECT: DO NOT DESPISE THE CHASTENING OF THE LORD!
Memory verse: "As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. Therefore be zealous and repent.” (Revelation 3 vs 19.)
READ: Hebrews 12 vs 5 - 11:
12:5: And you have forgotten the exhortation which speaks to you as to sons: “My Son, do not despise the chastening of the LORD, nor be discouraged when you are rebuked by Him;
12:6: For whom the LORD loves He chastens, and scourges every son whom He receives.”
12:7: If you endure chastening, God deals with you as with sons; for what son is there whom a father does not chasten?
12:8: But if you be without chastening, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate and not sons.
12:9: Furthermore, we have had human fathers who corrected us, and we paid them respect. Shall we not much more readily be in subjection to the Father of spirits, and live?
12:10: For they indeed for a few days chastened us as seemed best for them, but He for our profit, that you may be partakers of His holiness.
12:11: Now no chastening seems to be joyful for the present, but painful: nevertheless afterward it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.
INTIMATION:
Chastening denotes refining or training that involves discipline and correction by reproving, and admonishing that may involve punishment. Correction by reproving, and admonition, even when it involves punishment, is a vital part of discipline, and discipline means “to teach and to train.” God chastens us in line with the aforestated reasons.
Discipline sounds negative to many people because some disciplinarians are not loving. God, however, is the source of all love because He is love (First John 4 vs 8). He doesn’t punish us because He enjoys inflicting pain, but because He is deeply concerned about our development. He knows that in order to become morally strong and good, we must learn the difference between right and wrong. His loving discipline enables us to do this. And this is to ensure that the glorious destiny He had prepared for us beforehand is not missed by us by reason of disobedience or indiscipline.
God’s purpose in discipline is not to punish but to bring people back to Him. And in Him consists all there is in life. He created all things, and all things are His. He created all things according wHis predetermined purposes, and works to fulfill His purposes and not to make us happy. God may discipline you to help you out of your uncaring attitude if you are lukewarm in your devotion to Him. But He uses only loving discipline.
Therefore, you can avoid God’s chastening if you are walking in your God’s ordained path of life. And when you fall out of path, you will avoid His discipline by drawing near to Him again through confession, service, worship, and studying His Word. Just as the spark of love can be rekindled in marriage, so the Holy Spirit can re-ignite our zeal for God when we allow Him to work in our heart.
Now, come to think of it, who loves his child more—the father who allows the child to do what will harm him, or the one who corrects, trains, and even punishes the child to help him learn what is right? It’s never pleasant to be corrected and disciplined by God, but His discipline is a sign of His deep love for us. When God corrects you, see it as proof of His love, and ask Him what He is trying to teach you.
Knowing the thoughts of God for us—“thoughts of good and not for evil” (Jeremiah 29 vs 11),—we ought to respond to His discipline (chastening) gratefully, as the appropriate response we owe a loving Father. Instead of accepting it with self-pity, thinking we really don’t deserve it, or be angry and resentful toward God.
Certainly, not every calamity that happens to us comes directly from God. It’s difficult to know when God has been disciplining us until we look back on the situation later. But if we rebel against God and refuse to repent when He had identified some sin in our lives, God may use guilt, crises, or bad experiences to bring us back to Him. It’s noteworthy that sometimes, however, difficult times come when we have no flagrant of sin. At times like that, our response then should be patience, integrity, and trust that God will show us what to do.
Just as success in family life, business, or in athletics, is by hard work and consistent discipline, the Christian life is much the same. Some people think it takes too much work, but achieving anything worthwhile requires hard work. Being a Christian is not a shortcut to an easy life. The chastening of God is all for our own profiting; that we may be partakers of God’s holiness, and the inherent yield of peaceable fruit of righteousness if we are trained by it. When you are wise to obey God’s laws—working hard at living as God asks—you discover that no worldly success can compare with the joy of knowing God.
Prayer: Abba Father, You are a Loving Father, and Faithful Companion. Your thoughts for me; your plans to take care of me and not to abandon me, plans to give me the future I hope for if I obey is unquestionable. O Lord, endue me with the spirit of wisdom and obedience to You for my all round profiting, in Jesus’ Name I have prayed. Amen.
PRAISE THE LORD!