Sunday, December 29, 2024

FROM LO-DEBAR TO THE KING'S TABLE

FROM LO-DEBAR TO THE KING’S TABLE

God chose David when he was but a shepherd boy and ignored by the rest of his family. His father and brothers didn’t think he had the makings of a warrior, much less a king. But God saw it differently. God chose David, who others discounted, and David never forgot it: “Who remembered us in our low estate: for his mercy endureth for ever” (Ps. 136:23). If you’ve been snubbed, ridiculed, or dishonored, don’t worry. God’s got good plans for you. A great example of what the Lord can is found in 2 Samuel 9, where God brought Mephibosheth from a very low place to a high one.

 

David and Saul’s son Jonathan became great friends, so when both Saul and Jonathan died, David wanted to bless their family. He asked: “Is there yet any that is left of the house of Saul, that I may show him kindness for Jonathan’s sake?” (2 Sam. 9:1 CEB).

 

“David called in Ziba, one of the servants of Saul’s family. David said, ‘So you are Ziba.’ ‘Yes, Your Majesty, I am.’ David asked, ‘Are any of Saul’s family still alive? If there are, I want to be kind to them.’

 

“Ziba answered, ‘One of Jonathan’s sons is still alive, but he can’t walk.’ ‘Where is he?’ David asked. Ziba replied, ‘He lives in Lo-Debar with Machir, the son of Ammiel.’ David sent some servants to bring Jonathan’s son from Lo-Debar. His name was Mephibosheth, and he was the grandson of Saul. He came to David and knelt down. David asked, ‘Are you Mephibosheth?’ ‘Yes, I am, Your Majesty’” (2 Sam. 9:2-6 CEB).

 

Two hidden secrets in the above passage will amaze and bless you. The first is the fact that this man lived in Lo-Debar. I looked up the meaning of this word. “Lo” means “no, or without.” The word “debar” comes from two words. One translates as a “pasture, or a flock or fold, as in a sheepfold.” The other is “dabar,” meaning “word, answer, speaking, teaching, and communicating.” Lo-Debar was without a  pasture, a place with no flocks, no answers, no teaching, no communication. Why is this important? You’ll see in a minute.

 

The second hidden secret in this passage is the meaning of the man’s name, Mephibosheth. This name translates as “exterminating the idol.” This poor man was a child of our God, stuck in a low place, Lo-Debar; a place where he couldn’t operate his God-given specialty. God gave him the distinct ability in his name: to exterminate idols, but he was spiritually imprisoned in a place where there was no one to listen. There was no pasture for the Word of God.

 

Maybe you have experienced a similar predicament, where it seemed you were thwarted on every side and had difficulty getting through. It reminds me of when our Lord Jesus went back to his hometown of Nazareth, and “he did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief” (Matt. 13:58).

 

God didn’t want Mephibosheth, an exterminator of idols, to be in a place of spiritual bondage, and He doesn’t want you in one, either. God sent David to bring this man up out of Lo-Debar.

 

David said, ‘Don’t be afraid. I’ll be kind to you because Jonathan was your father. I’m going to give you back the land that belonged to your grandfather Saul. Besides that, you will always eat with me at my table.’ Mephibosheth knelt down again and said, ‘Why should you care about me? I’m worth no more than a dead dog’” (vv. 7-8).

 

We see from this passage that Mephibosheth’s self-image was terrible. He was dejected and miserable. People will lean towards anger, depression and despondency when they feel they can’t express who they really are. How many times have you or one of your children proclaimed: “Nobody understands me.” But the Lord does understand and will always answer our cries.

 

Through David, God rescued Mephibosheth from bondage to freedom and delight.

 

“David called in Ziba, Saul’s chief servant, and told him, ‘Since Mephibosheth is Saul’s grandson, I’ve given him back everything that belonged to your master Saul and his family. You and your fifteen sons and twenty servants will work for Mephibosheth. You will farm his land and bring in his crops so that Saul’s family and servants will have food. But Mephibosheth will always eat with me at my table.’

 

“Ziba replied, ‘Your Majesty, I will do exactly what you tell me to do.’ So Ziba’s family and servants worked for Mephibosheth. Mephibosheth was lame, but he lived in Jerusalem and ate at David’s table, just like one of David’s own sons” (vv.9-13).

 

There are many other examples in the Bible of God delivering His loved ones from prisons of all kinds, bringing them from low places to high ones. Be expecting to personally experience being freed from the bonds of Lo-Debar to your new place at the table of King Jesus. Ask and receive.

 

Love, Carolyn

 

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Sunday, December 22, 2024

HIS WILL IS TO TAKE SICKNESS AWAY AND FULFILL OUR DAYS

HIS WILL IS TO TAKE SICKNESS AWAY AND FULFILL OUR DAYS

When we read in the Bible that God says, “I will,” we need to understand that God is telling us what He desires and wants for us. He asks, “Do you want to know what My will is? This is it.” In the original texts, God jumps directly to the action, which we find after the “I will.” “Put none of these diseases on thee,” “Take sickness away,” and “Fulfill your days” are three phrases to focus on.

 

The first phrase is in Exodus 15:26: “I will put none of these diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians: for I am the Lord that healeth thee.” In this verse, “put” is a Hebrew word that means “place, set, bring to pass, lay upon.” Part of the meaning of this word is “consider.” God wouldn’t even consider laying any of these diseases on us. It wouldn’t even cross His mind! I found the following on some of these diseases:

 

God doesn’t put disease on us; it is His will that none afflict us. If they do, then there is a cure. Going to God and reminding Him of His will is certainly a good place to start. And especially since in the very same verse, He says: “I am the Lord that healeth thee.”

 

The next phrase to look at is in Exodus 23:25: “I will take sickness away from the midst of thee.”

The word “take” means “remove, to cause to depart, to come to an end, reject, abolish, pluck away, to turn off, behead, withdraw, and be without.” Those are powerful words, and those are what the Lord God, our Creator, wants to do to ANY sickness that attacks us from within or without.

 

The last verse to look at is Exodus 23:26: “The number of thy days I will fulfill.” We use the phrase, “they died before their time.” There is a time set for each of our lives, and the Bible says it is when the number of our days have been fulfilled. But let’s look at what that word “fulfilled” really means.

 

It’s the Hebrew word “male’,” which means accomplished, replenished, overflow, satisfied. It means fullness, abundance, complete. It means to fill any vacant place with abundance, like in Genesis 1:22, “fill the waters in the sea, or Exodus 40:34 “the glory of Jehovah filled the tabernacle.” It’s also used of satisfying the soul, i.e., the desire, the hunger. It means to do anything fully or thoroughly. In Jeremiah 4:5 “male’” is translated, “cry out fully, i.e., strongly. All of these great attributes are God’s will for fulfilling our days here on earth.

 

The above three “I will” verses are great ones to focus on and repeat back to our Lord out loud. Slowly re-read the paragraphs above, pausing at each definition of God’s action word. Think about what the Lord is really saying to you. Put the verse in your own words, then pray like God told Isaiah to pray:

 

God says to Isaiah in chapter 43, verse 26: “Meet me in court! State your case and prove that you are right.” That’s the Contemporary English Version. The Amplified reads: “Remind me [of your merits with a thorough report]; let us plead and argue our case together. State your position, that you may be proved right.” And in the KJV: “Put me in remembrance: let us plead together: declare thou, that thou mayest be justified” (Isa. 43:26). Sometimes I do like Mary did, and say to the Lord: “Be it unto me according to thy word” (Luke 1:38).

 

 

If we can believe, we receive. “Jesus said unto him, ‘If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.’” (Mark 9:23).

 

WE’RE SO THANKFUL THAT GOD GAVE US THE GIFT OF THE LIVING CHRIST. MERRY CHRISTMAS!!

Love, Carolyn

 

One of my books or booklets would be a great Christmas gift for a family member or friend 😊

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=BOOKS+BY+cAROLYN+mOLICA&crid=16D4X7I4BV76Z&sprefix=books+by+carolyn+molic%2Caps%2C450&ref=nb_sb_noss

 

Sunday, December 15, 2024

WHEN GOD SAYS, "I WILL"

WHEN GOD SAYS, “I WILL”

When we say, “I will,” it’s often a weak or mundane response, like: “I will take a ride.” But when God says, “I will,” it’s much stronger and should be understood as: “THIS IS MY WILL; THIS IS WHAT I WANT.” I started in Genesis, looking up the usages of “I will.” But it wasn’t there when I looked for it in the original texts! Why not? God didn’t need to say, “I will.” The translators added it. God’s will was in the action word following the “I will.”

 

This seems to be consistent throughout the Bible. God doesn’t need a lead-up; He jumps right in with immediate engagement. I’ll show you by starting with the first place we find “I will” in the King James translation of Bible. (You men looking for the perfect wife will love this one.)

 

Genesis 2:18: “And the Lord God said, ‘It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him.’” When you drop the “I will,” you have a much more direct and powerful demand: MAKE, as in “make it happen; do it.” The original Hebrew word is “asah.” By the simple task of looking it up on your online Strong’s Concordance, you see that it means “to produce, to procure, to prepare, to put in order, appoint, ordain, bring about, to celebrate, and maintain!” WOW! What a great promise for any single man who admits to needing a help “meet for him.” God’s will is to MAKE it happen absolutely! God says it’s His will to perform, celebrate, and maintain it! It’s like He’s declaring to His creation: “Make it happen!”

 

You’ll see a further explanation of the word MAKE on the same Concordance website.  It’s “to create, to work a miracle, to make or produce it from oneself.” What a great and loving God. Three examples are how a cow makes milk, a tree makes fruit, and a grain makes flour. The product comes from the source. The explanation goes on to say that the things made are acquired by labor. It is prepared and made ready, like food. It is also trained and combed (not shaved). When we apply this to a human being, God is telling us that He is the one who produces this person. He prepares them; He labors in them to give them the best stuff. He trains them and combs them, bringing out the best, not cutting them off. When God picks a person for you, He does it right.

 

The above example is the first place we see God saying, “I will.” I also looked up Genesis 17:7, where God says to Abraham: “And I will establish my covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee.” Galatians 3:29 says: “If ye be Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” So, the many “I wills” God said to Abraham after Genesis 17:7 apply to us, too. I highly recommend looking some of them up.

 

But in this verse, the action word after “I will” in this verse is “ESTABLISH.” It’s a firm, strong, and sure declaration, like the MAKE in Genesis 2. In this verse, God is talking about a personal relationship between Him and us. When we look up the word “establish,” it means “to prove, to fulfill, to validate, to raise up, stir up, stand up, make clear, and strengthen.” God’s strong desire is a personal, organic relationship with us every day.

 

In next Sunday’s post, I will look at three very powerful “I will” verses in Exodus 15:26 and Exodus 23:25-26. The verses read:

 

I will put none of these diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians: for I am the Lord that healeth thee” (Ex. 15:26).

 

I will take sickness away from the midst of thee” (Ex. 23:25).

 

“The number of thy days I will fulfill” (Ex. 23:26).

 

Four steps - 1. We look up the “I will” verses in the King James Bible. 2. We jump right over the “I will” and go directly to the action God Himself declares. 3. We agree His action is our blessing. 4. We believe, and we receive with thanksgiving. And all the glory goes to God.

 

Love, Carolyn

 

One of my books or booklets would be a great Christmas gift for a family member or friend 😊

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=BOOKS+BY+cAROLYN+mOLICA&crid=16D4X7I4BV76Z&sprefix=books+by+carolyn+molic%2Caps%2C450&ref=nb_sb_noss

 

Sunday, December 1, 2024

CREATIVE MIRACLES

CREATIVE MIRACLES

Psalm 105:15 says: “Touch not my anointed; do my prophets no harm.” But verse 17 reads: “Joseph was sold for a servant, whose feet they hurt with fetters: his soul came into iron.”  A contradiction? No. Verse 19 tells us: “Until the time that his word came: the word of the Lord tried him.” Timing is a vital part of what we need to understand about how God works. “Time” in the original text means the “certain time, the proper time, the fit time,” and “word” means “the answer, the promise, the notable deed.” There is a certain timing for every answer, every promise to come to pass, every notable deed. Receiving new body parts and healing old ones are notable deeds.

 

I’ve never been in a service where a person has received a new body part, never seen for myself a hand grow or an eye develop where there was none before, but I believed it, and I trust that others have witnessed this kind of miracle too. I found a verse that documents how this kind of creative miracle works. It’s like the verse that tells us God knew us before we were born. The following verse shows us that He also sees us completely healed and whole! Read it slowly and concentrate.

 

Psalm 139:16: “Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book, all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.”

 

The King James Version has a remarkable note on the phrase “in continuance were fashioned.” The note goes: “Or, what days they should be fashioned.” 

 

God already saw the end from the beginning, and in His sight, the part was already there; But in our time, not necessarily from birth. Just like God saw Joseph as the Pharaoh’s right-hand man, placed there for Israel’s survival in a time of famine, but that didn’t happen right away. Joseph was in prison for a while first. People who are missing body parts or lacking the healing they need are in a type of prison as well. But in God’s sight, there is absolutely a day for the unperfect to be perfected. God always knew what He had for Joseph, and He always knows what wholeness in body, soul, and spirit He has for us, too. We must faithfully believe and trust.

 

Joseph’s trust and faithfulness sustained him, and God was able to bless Joseph and turn around Satan’s plan entirely, at the right time. 

 

The older I grow, the more peaceful I am with God’s timing and the more aggressive I am with taking down demonic forces. We must trust the Lord’s timing for the manifestation of our personal word (as in Psalm 105:19, our answer, promise, or notable deed). Confidence that the Lord will do what He’s promised keeps our hearts healthy and at peace so that, in the present, we can remain calm and sure ambassadors for our Lord. 

                                                                                                                                  

Love, Carolyn https://www.amazon.com/s?k=BOOKS+BY+cAROLYN+mOLICA&crid=16D4X7I4BV76Z&sprefix=books+by+carolyn+molic%2Caps%2C450&ref=nb_sb_noss