Good to Great in God's Eyes by Chip Ingram
Author:Chip Ingram
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: REL070000;REL012000
ISBN: 9781493406951
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Published: 2017-02-22T00:00:00+00:00
Old Testament Risk-Takers
When God selected a people through whom to bless the nations with salvation, he began with a man named Abram. Abram was faced with a choice between the status quo and a risky adventure, and he chose to follow Godâs voice. And God didnât start him out slowly, either. His first instruction to Abram was to leave his home, his land, and his extended family and go wherever this invisible God led. Where? God wouldnât say. Not yet. Abram had to leave first, then his destination would be shown later.
Thatâs a huge step of faith. Abram was probably secure in the status quo. Then, all of a sudden, a God who couldnât be seen spoke an open-ended command, and Abram and his wife packed up all their possessions and set off toward Canaan (Gen. 12:1â5). He believed the intangible promises of God were more real than the visible reality he lived in, and he acted on what he didnât yet see. Thatâs faith, and with Abramâhis name changed to Abraham after he believedâit was radical.
Moses was another man called by God to take a risk. His step of faith involved returning to a country heâd been exiled from, walking into a hostile Pharaohâs courts, and demanding the release of a million or so slaves (Exod. 3:1â10). Moses wasnât exactly fearless; he argued with God, trying to convince him to send someone else. He knew that he was wanted in Egypt dead or alive. He didnât want to go back. But God insisted, Moses obeyed, and even though it looked like a suicide mission at first, God honored his promise and Mosesâs radical step of faith.
David was young and idealistic, but so were hundreds of the soldiers in Israelâs army. Many of them probably knew how to use a slingshot as well as David did. Every member of the army, however, looked at Goliath, heard his taunts against God and his people, and only wished they could do something about it. No one stepped up to the plateâexcept David. David was so offended by the giant who slandered Israelâs God that he was willing to risk his life (1 Sam. 17:20â37). God was pleased with that risk of faith, and the rest is history.
Esther confronted evil at high levels of authority. We read her storyâhow this Jewish girl became the queen of Persia and God used her to save the Jews from extermination (Esther 5â7)âand we perhaps donât realize the risk she took. But her life was genuinely on the line. It was easy for the king to get a new wife from his vast harem if the current one did something to offend him. Thatâs what happened to his previous wife; she had a bad day and was gone. So when Esther broke protocol and went into the kingâs court to tell him about the plot to kill the Jews, she could have been put to death at the kingâs whim. Was she afraid? Of courseâanyone would have been.
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