Devotion for Tuesday, January 5, 2010

January 5th, 2010 · 12:00 am @   - 

Text: Psalm 18:16-19

An idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words, for example: “a watched pot never boils,” which means some things work out in their own time, so being impatient and constantly checking will just make things seem longer. Or, “out of the frying pan, into the fire,” meaning: If you get out of one problem, but find yourself in a worse situation, you are out of the frying pan, into the fire. It is this latter idiom that is contrasted in today’s text.

There were times in David’s life when his own responses caused him even greater grief. One example of him going from the frying pan into the fire was when he fled Saul for fear of death, only to have all his men ready to kill him (cf. 1 Samuel 27:1; 1 Samuel 30:6). Another was when he chose to number his army (cf. 2 Samuel 24:10). In fact, many of us may be able to identify with David’s plight after we, too, tried to handle spiritual problems through personal measures. It is the distress caused by our personal action that, many times, prompts us to prayer.

But we are not alone in our suffering, distress was also a recurring precursor to David’s times of deliverance as seen in 1 Samuel 30:6; in our text Psalm 18:6, 19; and very plainly in Psalm 4:1, “…thou hast enlarged me when I was in distress….” In today’s reading David speaks of being taken, drawn out of waters, and rescued. But in all those actions he didn’t go from the frying pan into the fire; rather, he went from being in “distress” to being delivered into “liberty” (i.e. “the large place” of Psalm 18:19 and “enlarged” in Psalm 4:1). And that is just how our God operates. When He moves in our own time of distress, we don’t go from the frying pan into the fire; we go from distress to liberty, from calamity to comfort, from grief to glory!

As you reflect today on the many times He has delivered you from a troubling test, give Him thanks for “the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials…” (2 Peter 2:9 ESV). Pray specifically for those who are making things worse in their lives by leaning on their own understanding rather than turning to the Lord.

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