..............................................................................................................................................
.
Joseph's bones are
symbolic of the promises of God for our lives. We carry them with us when our
spirits are broken because of unrelenting difficulties, when we feel like we're
trapped in an impossible situation with no way out, and when we're wandering
seemingly aimlessly through the dry and barren wilderness. And yet, because of
God's promises, we can know that none of these seasons is the end. God will be
faithful because it's who He is - He can't be unfaithful. Cling to God's
promises over your life today, and know that in His perfect timing each one of
them will be fulfilled in the best way possible.
Emily
Ellis
"Even
if we are faithless, He remains faithful, for He cannot deny Himself" (2
Timothy 2:13).
All of
us have probably questioned God's faithfulness at some point in our lives, thinking, “God
came through for me that time, but will He come through for me this time?”
Even
though Joseph spent the majority of his life as a ruler in the foreign land of
Egypt, he never forgot God's promise to his ancestors, nor did he doubt it.
At 110
years old, Joseph told his brothers on his deathbed in Egypt, "I am
about to die, but God will certainly come to your aid and
bring you up from this land to the land He promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob... When God
comes to your aid, you are to carry my bones up from here” (Genesis
50:24-25, emphasis added).
Joseph
died, and the Book of Genesis ends.
Then we
open the Book of Exodus to find that, more than 400 years later, God's people
were enslaved to the Egyptians.
Joseph's
bones were still in Egypt, waiting to be buried in the promised land, but the
promised land looked nowhere in sight.
Even
after God sent Moses to the Hebrew people to tell them of their coming
deliverance, "they did not listen to him because of their broken spirit
and hard labor" (Exodus 6:9).
We try
to faithfully wait on the Lord with hope-filled expectation, but when our
promised land is nowhere in sight and the hits just keep on coming, we're
tempted to give up believing.
We
can't imagine hoping for restoration when disappointment looms at every corner.
But a
broken spirit is never the end of our story, just as it wasn't the end of the
Israelites' story.
God was
faithful to keep His promise and deliver His people out of Egypt.
And as
they started their journey out of slavery, "Moses took the bones of
Joseph with him, because Joseph had made the Israelites swear a solemn oath,
saying, 'God will certainly come to your aid; then you must take my bones with
you from this place'" (Exodus 13:19).
Joseph
was certain God would be faithful to keep His promise, and hundreds of years
later, Joseph's bones served as a reminder of that promise as the Hebrews left
Egypt on their way to the promised land.
Joseph's
bones traveled with the Hebrews through the Red Sea and wandered with them for
40 years in the wilderness.
Over
and over again in their wanderings the people felt dejected: would God
really keep His promise to give them their own land?
We can
all identify with this — the waiting can be difficult at times and feel never
ending. But it always ends.
The day
finally came when God's people claimed their promised inheritance.
The
waiting, the doubting, and the frustration were over. God was true to His word.
And
here's the best part: "As for the bones of Joseph, which the people of
Israel brought up from Egypt, they buried them at Shechem, in the piece of land
that Jacob bought from the sons of Hamor the father of Shechem for a hundred
pieces of money. It became an inheritance of the descendants of Joseph"
(Joshua 24:32).
Joseph's
bones being buried in the land God swore to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob marks the
faithfulness of an eternally-faithful Promise Keeper.
God got
it right, down to the last detail.
Joseph's
bones are symbolic of the promises of God for our lives.
We
carry them with us when our spirits are broken because of unrelenting
difficulties, when we feel like we're trapped in an impossible situation with
no way out, and when we're wandering seemingly aimlessly through the dry and
barren wilderness.
And
yet, because of God's promises, we can know that none of these seasons is the
end.
God will be
faithful because it's who He is. He can't be unfaithful.
As Paul
reminds us, "Even if we are faithless, He remains faithful, for He
cannot deny Himself" (2 Timothy 2:13).
Cling
to God's promises over your life today, and know that in His perfect timing
each one of them will be fulfilled in the best way possible.
Because
God is faithful and He always gets it right,
down to the last detail.
About
Emily Ellis
Ever
since my first "dark night of the soul," I've been drawn to books,
songs, and stories about suffering: why we suffer, how we suffer, and God's
purpose in our suffering. People who know me would probably look at my life and
say I've lived a charmed one, and I have in a lot of ways. I was raised in a
Christian home, I've never known lack, I got to study theology and go to
seminary, and I have my dream job (I'm the team leader for adult ministry
magazines and devotionals at LifeWay, and the content editor for Journey
Devotional, and I LOVE it!).
But
one thing I've come to learn in my short 32 years on this earth is that,
eventually, suffering touches us all, and our response to suffering really can
direct the course of our life. I've suffered small things (those "little
deaths" and "blessed inconveniences" as Elisabeth Elliot calls
them), but I've also suffered bigger things, things that left me looking up to
the heavens and crying with David, "Lord, how long will You forget me?
Forever?" (Ps. 13:1). I also suffer certain things daily that no one knows
about but the Lord - anxieties, fears, pressures. And you probably do, too.
"Midnight"
has come to me more than once, and I've struggled in those times to believe
that God is who He says He is. Who hasn't, honestly? But, over and over, God
has proven Himself faithful. And He's also opened my eyes to the incredible
mystery of how, in my own suffering, I'm sharing in the suffering of Christ,
and that's a gift and a privilege. "For you have been given not
only the privilege of trusting in Christ but also the privilege of
suffering for him" (Phil. 1:29, emphasis added). This principle has
changed everything for me.
http://www.believingatmidnight.com/blog/2016/11/13/josephs-bones-and-gods-faithfulness
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Thomas Chisolm
CLICK HERE . . . to view complete playlist . .
.
https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2018/07/great-is-thy-faithfulness-thomas.html
https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2018/07/great-is-thy-faithfulness-thomas.html
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