Thursday, August 18, 2011

Hedge

THIS MORNING, I AWOKE TO FIND THIS DEVOTIONAL IN MY INBOX, SENT FROM A DEAR FRIEND.  AS I REFLECTED UPON IT THIS MORNING, ONE SIMPLE THOUGHT CAME TO MIND - EVEN IN THE CLOSING IN, THE PROTECTION, THE SETTING OF LIMITS AND BOUNDARIES, WE ARE SURROUNDED BY LUSH, GREEN BEAUTY.  SO OFTEN, IT IS OUR EARTHLY PERSPECTIVE THAT LIMITS US FROM SEEING HIS BEAUTY IN ALL THINGS.



I waited patiently for the LORD.(Psalm 40:1)

Waiting is much more difficult than walking, for waiting requires patience, and patience is a rare virtue. We enjoy knowing that God builds hedges around His people, when we look at the hedge from the aspect of protection. But when we see it growing higher and higher until we can no longer see over it, we wonder if we will ever get out of our little sphere of influence and service, where we feel trapped. Sometimes it is hard for us to understand why we do not have a larger area of service, and it becomes difficult for us to "brighten the corner" where we are. But God has a purpose in all of His delays."The steps of a good man are ordered by the LORD" (Ps. 37:23 quoted from KJV).

Next to this verse, in the margin of his Bible, George Mueller made this note:"And the stops too." It is a sad mistake for someone to break through God's hedges. It is a vital principle of the Lord's guidance for a Christian never to move from the spot where he is sure God has placed him, until the "pillar of cloud" (Ex. 13:21) moves. from Sunday School Times

Once we learn to wait for the Lord's leading in everything, we will know the strength that finds its highest point in an even and steady walk. Many of us are lacking the strength we so desire, but God gives complete power for every task He calls us to perform. Waiting—keeping yourself faithful to His leading—this is the secret of strength. And anything that does not align with obedience to Him is a waste of time and energy. Watch and wait for His leading. Samuel Dickey Gordon

Must life be considered a failure for someone compelled to stand still, forced into inaction and required to watch the great, roaring tides of life from shore? No—victory is then to be won by standing still and quietly waiting. Yet this is a thousand times harder to do than in the past, when you rushed headlong into the busyness of life. It requires much more courage to stand and wait and still not lose heart or lose hope, to submit to the will of God, to give up opportunities for work and leave honors to others, and to be quiet, confident, and rejoicing while the busy multitude goes happily along their way.

The greatest life is:"after you have done everything, to stand" (Eph. 6:13). J. R. Miller

Sent from the Streams in the Desert Devotional, by L. B. Cowman
 




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