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regard each
limitation as a gift
Our
Daily Bread
Key Verse: “You did not look to
the One who made it, or have regard for the One who planned it long ago.” – Isaiah 22:11
Today’s Scripture: Isaiah 22:8–11 (NIV)
During the reign of King
Hezekiah (728–686 B.C.), the Southern Kingdom of Judah faced a significant
military threat from the Assyrians, who’d already destroyed the Northern
Kingdom of Israel (722 B.C.).
To prepare Judah to fight the
Assyrians, Hezekiah adopted the defensive strategy of denying the invading army
access to their water supply (2 Chronicles 32:1–8).
He “blocked all the
springs and the stream that flowed through the land” (verse 4) and at the same time dug
tunnels to bring water into the city to ensure they’d have sufficient water to
last them through a prolonged siege (2 Kings 20:20).
He also fortified the wall
defenses that protected the city and the water supply and made large numbers of
weapons and shields (2 Chronicles 32:5).
There’s a natural spring that
rises on the east side of the city of Jerusalem.
In ancient times it was the
city’s only water supply and was located outside the walls. Thus, it was the
point of Jerusalem’s greatest vulnerability.
The exposed spring meant that
the city, otherwise impenetrable, could be forced to surrender if an attacker
were to divert or dam the spring.
King Hezekiah addressed this
weakness by driving a tunnel through 1,750 feet of solid rock from the spring
into the city where it flowed into the “Lower Pool” (see 2 Kings 20:20; 2
Chronicles 32:2–4).
But in all of this,
Hezekiah “did not look to the One who made it, or have regard for the
One who planned it long ago” (Isaiah 22:11).
Planned what?
God Himself “planned” the
city of Jerusalem in such a way that its water supply was unprotected.
The spring outside the wall
was a constant reminder that the inhabitants of the city must depend solely on
Him for their salvation.
Can it be that our
deficiencies exist for our good?
Indeed, the apostle Paul said
that he would “boast” in his limitations, because it was through weakness that
the beauty and power of Jesus was seen in him (2 Corinthians 12:9–10).
Can we then regard each
limitation as a gift that reveals God as our strength? By: David H. Roper
God, I’m weak. I pray that others would see
that You are my strength.
Bible in a Year: Zechariah 13–14,
Revelation 21
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