SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 9/30/2011 8:22:21 AM
My Worship Time Focus:
He
Expressed His Concern
Bible Reading
& Meditation Reference: Ester 4:1-3
Message of the verses: “1 When
Mordecai learned all that had been done, he tore his clothes, put on sackcloth
and ashes, and went out into the midst of the city and wailed loudly and
bitterly. 2 He went as far as the king’s gate, for no one was to enter the
king’s gate clothed in sackcloth. 3 In each and every province where the
command and decree of the king came, there was great mourning among the Jews,
with fasting, weeping and wailing; and many lay on sackcloth and ashes.”
Today’s
SD begins the forth chapter in both the commentary of Dr. Wiersbe and also the
book of Ester. Dr. Wiersbe entitles this
chapter “A Day of Decision,” and he writes this statement before beginning his
commentary, “In which the queen goes into her counting house and counts the
cost.” In this chapter we will discover
what it is that Mordecai will do about the peril that has fallen upon the
Jewish people.
I
want to take this opportunity to write about what the Jewish people did when
they heard about the law that was to kill all of them. They began to fast, and weep and wail, and
also put on sackcloth and ashes. We see
this at different times throughout the OT, and at times in the NT. It seems that this is a lost form of worship
in our churches today. In the economy of
the OT Law people were required to fast.
While Jesus was here on earth He explained to the disciples abot John
the Baptist that the reason that His disciples did not fast was because He, the
Bridegroom, was with them, however after He left them they would again begin to
fast. The NT also states “when you fast,” and so it is assuming
that people will fast.
I
have read a number of books on the human benefits of fasting and have fasted on
two different occasions, once for a week on nothing but water, and then for 22
days with only one glass of juice per day.
It is amazing that when one fasts that after three days they are not
hungry at all, and it seems to me that both the physical and spiritual things
that happen when you fast are similar.
Physical benefits are to cleanse the body of toxins and allow the body
to begin to heal itself. Spiritual
benefits are that of cleansing the mind and spirit, taking time to listen to
the Lord as your mind is much clearer than when you are eating. Other spiritual benefits are that when you
fast it usually because you have a spiritual item that you are concerned about
and so you do not want the process of eating to hamper your thoughts about
seeking the Lord’s direction for your life.
When
you fast, as I mentioned, after three days you are not hungry, however the next
time that you feel hungry is the time to end the fast, for if you don’t it
begins to starve you. If you look at
both Matthew four, and Luke four you will read about the Lord Jesus Christ
fasting for forty days. Although the
text does not say so I do believe that the Lord did drink water, for after
three days without water you can surely die, and it seems to me that Jesus did
not use his powers for things like that.
If you read the text it says that after forty days He became hungry, and
so it was time for the fast to end. I
read of a man who fasted for ninety days, and it was under supervision. He must have been a large man when he began
his fast, for when fasting the body uses the excess fat as fuel to keep on
living. Large people who fast seem to
lose weight, while thinner people do not lose that much weight.
At
any rate the Jewish people began to fast and pray to the Lord because of the
peril that had come upon them and Haman and the king were feasting and having a
party time.
Mordecia
put on sackcloth and began to cry out over what had happened and he went all
the way to the king’s gate this way. He
did not care that others knew that he was Jewish for he was in mourning over
what had just taken place. Dr. Wiersbe
quotes this in his commentary from who he believes comes from Edmund Burke of
England, “All that is required for evil
to triumph is for good men to do nothing.”
Solomon writes the following “11
Be the saviour of those who are given up to death, and do not keep back help from
those who are slipping to destruction. 12 If you say, See, we had no knowledge
of this: does not the tester of hearts give thought to it? And he who keeps
your soul, has he no knowledge of it? And will he not give to every man the
reward of his work?” (Proverbs 24:11-12 Bible in Basic English)
These
quotes surely did not apply to Mordecai for he was doing something about what
was going on in Persia at this time, and the Lord would use both he and Ester
to save their people from wicked Haman and his plot to kill them.
Spiritual meaning for my life today: I hope to have the same courage that Mordecia
had when facing things like he faced. I
believe that the same cause is to be taken up by the people of God over the
issue of abortion, for who else cares for these unborn babies if we as
believers do not.
My Steps of
Faith for Today:
1.
Do what I can to help the cause of the many unborn
babies in America.
2.
Continue to learn contentment.
9/30/2011 9:08:12 AM
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