Good Morning All,
Job 19:25-26; “For I know
that my Redeemer lives, and at the
last he will stand upon the earth. And
after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in my
flesh I shall see God”
Confidence; that is what the
“little engine that could” had; it had confidence. As it climbed the mountain, it confidence
grew until it knew that it could climb the mountain. Confidence; that is what Babe Ruth had. In Game 3 of the 1932 World Series, Babe Ruth
pointed out to centerfield and then hit the next pitch over the centerfield
wall. Confidence; that is what Michael
Jordan had as he played professional basketball. Many times, while shooting a foul shot, he
would say to the opponent who fouled him, “watch this”. He would close his eyes and, usually, make
the free throw without looking.
Confidence is an amazing thing.
When
many people think of Job, they describe him as being patient, perhaps you have heard or even used the
phrase “the patience of Job” to describe dealing with a tough or a perplexing
problem. Yet patience does not exist by
itself; it needs a stronger counterpart to make patience work. In order for patience to work you must have
faith. It is only by faith that we can
have patience. Faith gives us the
strength and the courage to face the battles that we face. Even if these battles seem insurmountable, we
can be patient because we have faith that, in the end, we will succeed. We will be and are, right now, victorious.
It was faith that gave Job the courage to
be patient. It was faith that let him
see past the horrific events of his life and to see his Savior. Job had complete confidence that he would see
his Redeemer, standing on the earth and the Job would see him in Job’s only
flesh. Job knew that his Redeemer would
live and that he, Job, would live to see it, even after he was long dead. So no matter what happened, Job had faith
that God would give to Job the victory; so Job was patient because Job was
confident.
We can have that same confidence that Job
had. That confidence can give us
patience because we know, in time, that our Redeemer (Jesus) will stand on the
earth and we will see him in our flesh no matter how long it takes. This simple fact is what gives us all of our
hope, all of our confidence, all of our patience and all of our peace. We know that Jesus lives. The grave could not hold him; death could not
defeat him. So now the victory is
ours. No matter the pain, no matter the
battle, no matter the sorrow, the victory is ours and we know that Jesus lives
and because he lives we will live also.
Confidence; it is what you and I should have when facing this life. Confidence; that we will overcome whatever
obstacles there are and move forward to eternal life with Jesus.
Father in heaven, give us
the confidence to rely only on your grace and mercy for the needs of this
life. Help us to hold onto your loving
arms that we might be strengthened. Be
with those who are feeling the full weight of life’s many struggles. Send them your Spirit of comfort and peace
that they may say, “I know that my Redeemer lives.” In the precious name of Jesus, our living
redeemer, we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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