June 17, 2014–The “Unknown” Reason you should know

Why GodPraise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God. (2 Corinthians 1:3-4)

Over the past 32 years of full-time ministry, there have been many occasions when I’ve had to answer questions that begin with: “WHY?”

Sometimes it was easy to see a direct cause and effect, as in someone who smoked all their life being diagnosed with lung cancer.

But when I was asked to explain why the man who had never smoked a cigarette in his life was dying of lung cancer or why the drunk driver walked away from the accident with nary a scratch while the sober one lost her life, it was not that easy. It was downright difficult.

To be perfectly honest, in times such as these I had to admit that I could not really answer that question with any sense of certainty. The last thing a pastor does at a time when someone needs pastoral care is to talk theology or worse get into a debate on theodicy (why God permits evil things to happen to good people).

Sometimes the best answer I could offer was: “God only knows!” Then I would pray to that God who only knows why to give the one who asked the question His strength, peace, grace, clarity or whatever else they needed at that moment. For “your Father knows what you need before you ask” (Matthew 6:8).

However, with the benefit of hindsight, I have also discovered that when a follower of Jesus goes through such difficult situations, there is at least one sure answer to the “Why” question. It may not be readily apparent when someone is walking through the valley, but it becomes plain as you hit higher ground.

Let me illustrate with a man named Rex who I got to know outside church circles. His daughter, who had been barely married for a year, died very unexpectedly when she suffered an epileptic seizure while taking a bath. Needless to say it rocked his life. But, by the grace of God, he and his family came through the tragedy with their faith intact.

Because Rex was a leader in his business organization, he had the opportunity to share his testimony of God’s faithfulness, peace and comfort to thousands of people over the years that followed. Holy Spirit used his testimony to bring healing to many.

A few years later, the son of another leader in the same organization died in his sleep of an apparent heart attack. It was totally unexpected as this young man was a specimen of physical fitness. When Rex heard the news, he hopped on a plane and flew from one end of the country to the other so he could be with his friend Ron and his family.

Now you can see what the apostle Peter is talking about in the verse quoted above. As Rex experienced the comfort of his heavenly Father following the death of his daughter, now he could comfort Ron with the comfort he himself had received.

Dear DWOD friend, this is the unknown reason you should know when you are going through a difficult time or facing a test of your faith. God can use your experience to bring comfort, strength, counsel, companionship, etc. to another person who may be travelling down the same or similar road.

It may not always be easy to remember this when you’re wrapped up in your own pain, as some of you may be right now. But I pray that Holy Spirit will bring this to your remembrance.

For the day will indeed come when the Lord will use you in a way that you could have never imagined. And the person at the receiving end of your ministry will be so thankful—to you and “to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort.”

June 16, 2014–A Son Lives Completely Free

A son lives completely free(Be blessed by this DWOD for June 16, 2014 by guest contributor Barry Adams)

Now the Lord is the Spirit and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. (2 Corinthians 3:17)

The kingdom of God is all about living a free life. When Jesus announced His public ministry (Luke 4:18), He read from the Isaiah 61 passage of Scripture which starts off by saying: “The Spirit of the Lord Yahweh is on me; because Yahweh has anointed me to preach good news to the humble. He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and release to those who are bound…”

Simply put, Jesus came to set us free. In John 8: 36, Jesus clearly states this when He said: “If therefore the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed.” God loves freedom. Freedom of choice, freedom of expression, freedom to be who He created us to be.

It was our Father’s love of freedom that cost Him everything He had. In order for Adam and Eve to be truly free, they had to have the power to accept or reject the love that God offered them. There is no other way for love to operate. Love does not control, manipulate or oppress. To live in love means freedom to stay or freedom to leave.

Adam and Eve chose to go their own way which absolutely broke their Father’s heart and started a chain reaction in heaven that would cost the Godhead everything in order to redeem what was lost in the Garden. That is how important freedom is to God, for wherever He lives, there is complete freedom.

Anything that wars against freedom in our lives is something that we should take notice of. The spirit of religion moves in opposition to freedom. It sets rules and regulations, customs and traditions, applies pressure and guilt, all in order to keep people bound up… all in the name of God!

I am learning more and more how our Father hates captivity. He created everything to be free. Now just because we are free does not mean we abuse the trusted freedom that has been given to us as a gift. Galatians 5:13 tells us: “For you, brothers, were called for freedom. Only don’t use your freedom for gain to the flesh, but through love be servants to one another.”

If we truly live in love, there is no way that we will abuse our freedom. There will be many times in our life when we will lay down our rights in order to serve another. As a matter of fact, I believe the more that we are convinced that we are loved, the freer we will be to be the Lord’s bond servant. But it will be for love’s sake that we choose to lay down our life, not control, guilt or manipulation.

My prayer today is that each one of us would come into a deeper revelation of freedom than we have ever had before. My hope is that we would all be free from all of the ‘shoulds’ that would keep us in bondage in our life. May we all see that Jesus died on a cross so that we could live a free life. Free from sin, free from shame, free from condemnation…Free to be who He created us to be!

May the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation show us today the true heart of our heavenly Father so that we would know His love in its truest form. He doesn’t control us, manipulate us or abuse us. His love for us is so pure and so self-sacrificing, that we are free to come and free to go. Just as the loving father in the Prodigal Son story allowed his son to leave his house and take his inheritance with him, our Father entrusts us with the same choices.

May each one of us choose to live a free life and choose to live in love so that the love that God has for us might find its expression in servanthood beyond our wildest dreams, not because we have to, but simply because we choose to.

(Barry Adams is the humble vessel chosen by God to bless the world with the revelation known as the Father’s Love Letter. Along with his wife Annelise, Barry ministers the Father’s Love all over the world. Today’s DWOD is from a post he wrote for A Son’s Life Blog. Please check out his new website: http://www.aboutfathersbusiness.com)

June 15, 2014–You Impact Future Generations

002“I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me.” (Deuteronomy 5:9)

Passages such as Exodus 20:5, 34:7, Numbers 14:18 and Deuteronomy 5:9 make it very clear that the impact of sins extends beyond those who commit them.

Those of you who have offered yourself for any kind of inner healing ministry will be familiar with the term “sins of the fathers” or “generational curses.” Since no one can be totally aware of every sinful tendency that was passed down the generational lines to us, we simply break them off so they cannot continue to affect us adversely.

The flip side of generational curses is blessings that were handed down to us from generations that have gone before us. In passages such as Deuteronomy 5:10 and Exodus 20:6, we are told that our God is one who is equally known for “showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments.”

On this Father’s Day, as I was exploring the influence of godly fathers upon their families (e.g. Psalms 127 & 128), I came across a study that followed the generational lines of two prominent families from the 18th century. The goal was to see how curses and blessings manifested themselves in the lives of their descendants.

One family descended from Max Jukes, a well-known atheist, who did not follow the Lord. Neither did his wife. Among the over 1,200 descendants studied, 310 were professional vagrants; 440 were physically wrecked by lives of debauchery and uncleanness; 130 went to the penitentiary for an average of 13 years each (7 were murderers); 100 were alcoholics; 60 were habitual thieves; 190 were prostitutes. Of the 20 who learned a trade, 10 learned it in a state prison. Collectively, they cost the state of New York over a million dollars.

The second family studied was that of Jonathan Edwards, the New England preacher, and his godly wife, Sarah. Among their descendants, 300 became pastors, missionaries, and theological professors; over 100 became college professors; over 100 became lawyers, including 30 judges; over 60 became physicians; over 60 authored good books; 14 became presidents of universities; 3 became United States congressmen; and one, (although he was a black sheep spiritually), became the Vice President of the United States (Aaron Burr, Jr., Edwards’ grandson).

Wow! What a striking contrast!!

Dear DWOD friend, the consequences of your decisions today not only impact your destiny in your lifetime. They follow down the generational lines and impact the destinies of your descendants as well—for better or for worse. You can be responsible for handing them blessings or curses. Now, that’s a heavy, isn’t it? But it is the God’s honest truth.

What a privilege it would be to be known as one who passed only blessings down the generational lines as Jonathan and Sarah Edwards were! It is my prayer that this is what will be said of you and me many years from now.

Do I hear a loud AMEN?

June 14, 2014–Living Memorials

Peggy-Kennedy(Be blessed by this DWOD for June 14, 2014 by guest contributor Peggy Kennedy)

“I am anointed with fresh oil. The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree…planted in the house of the Lord…growing in grace…They are living memorials to show that the Lord is upright and faithful to His promises…” (Psalm 92:10-15 Amplified Bible)  

I love how the Lord speaks! I was waiting in line to receive ministry. As the speaker approached he spoke one word over me: “fresh”! And, enclosed in that one word was indeed a message from the Lord. I was thus directed to Psalm 92:10.

‘Anointed with fresh oil’ had a definite appeal to me. But there was more—much more! As the psalm rolls out there is more than encouragement. There is a clear statement of the contrast between the seeming “flourishing” of evil and the sure and ultimate flourishing of the people of the Lord!

The media reports and even circumstances of our personal arena can seem to indicate otherwise. However, this psalm states again that because of Who our God is, the measurement of “flourishing” is lifted to the eternal perspective.

What a picture: the “flourishing” of evil is presented as “springing up as grass”. Wonderfully, the “flourishing” of the righteous is described as the palm tree or cedar of Lebanon.

There’s a huge difference between “grass” and the palm tree or cedar tree! For these the Amplified version uses very appealing adjectives: long-lived, stately, upright, useful and fruitful, majestic, stable, durable and incorruptible. (vs. 12) I am definitely signing up for that list!

But the Lord had even more to say to me. The “flourishing” of those planted in the house of the Lord means they will be growing in grace and have ongoing fruitfulness. Each season will be marked by fruit-bearing and spiritual vitality, trust, love and contentment. What a glorious contrast to the lies of the enemy that are marketed among people of all ages!

The psalm crescendos by describing these flourishing, fruit-bearing believers as “living memorials”! The message flowing from our lives gives constant testimony to Who our God is! He is faithful to His promises. He is my rock. He is uncompromisingly pure and righteous.

If the enemy has been whispering (or shouting) lies into your heart about anything other than who you really are and Who your God really is, you can rise up today with authority and choose to contradict those lies! Our God is alive and well and His principles of life and living really give us the advantage now and the eternal edge.

“Lord, thank you that I am flourishing and fruitful. Thank you that I am growing in grace and have a deep-settled contentment. I deny room to the “weeds and seeds” of the lies of the enemy. I don’t just have memories of fruitfulness in a previous season but I am a living memorial with a keen expectation–a LIVING MEMORIAL to Your amazing and ongoing faithfulness to Your promises.” Amen!

(Peggy Kennedy is a respected member of the Canadian Prophetic Council. According to her pastor Matt Tapley: “Peggy Kennedy carries a powerful anointing to consistently bring the Word of the Lord in a way that is both powerful and timely…mantled to walk in a heavenly grace that brings people of diverse backgrounds together in unity.”)

June 13, 2014–You ARE a Leader

Leading a school of fish(Be blessed by this DWOD for June 13, 2014 by guest contributor Lance Wallnau)

You may not know it but YOU are a leader!

D.L Moody made it his mission to answer a challenge he heard while just a young shoe salesman: “The world has yet to see what God can do through a man who is fully devoted to Him.” He went on to being the most dangerous shoe salesman in Boston…and a revivalist.

Time and again, heaven takes hold of the earnest underdog who is pressing on to be the best he or she can be. Did you know Joyce Meyers started out as a church secretary? I told you D.L. Moody was a shoe salesman. Smith Wigglesworth, a plummer.

Often, such ones become promoted over those with greater gifting. God sees something in them. They are becoming His Word made flesh. They get it into their heart and mind. When that happens, you become explosive. Don’t neglect the building up of your mind and inner man. Now, more than ever, we need leaders that are:

  1. Lovers in their quest for Jesus, worship intimately (bridal)
  2. Warriors in their unwavering courage to dismantle the gates of hell. By this I mean they know how to pray strong.
  3. Know how to be statesmen and what battles to fight. They know when and how to speak! When they speak, they do so with arguments of the spirit that the enemy cannot stop.

Here are some thoughts from my friend Rick Renner:

The Bible is full of people no different than you or me…who heard a word from God, responded in faith, came into divine alignment with what God said, and ultimately saw His word to them fulfilled in their lives. And because of these people’s commitment to believe and to possess what God had promised, they changed history!

I believe as you become true to the voice inside you, YOU will lead the school! (fish or people!)

(Dr. Lance Wallnau is a world-class trainer and consultant whose students span the globe. From bestselling authors, pastors, and billion dollar CEO‘s, he has helped to transform the lives of thousands. Please check out his resources at www.lancelearning.com)

June 12, 2014–Concentrate on what you can control

The Sams in IsraelI urge, then, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for all people—for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. (I Timothy 2:1-2)

We who live in the province of Ontario in the country of Canada were surprised by the results of the election that was held today. The ruling party, which had been plagued by scandals, was elected to power with a stunning majority. None of the opinion polls had predicted this overwhelming victory.

Many Christians, including me, have grave concerns about some of the policies of this government. I am personally aware of a Christian school being told that essentially they had to teach sex education classes which were in total opposition to their understanding of marriage as a covenant between a man and a woman only…or they would be shut down.

Chances are very good that with the solid majority that they have been given by the people of Ontario, they will have no trouble pushing through their legislative agenda, at least some of which will not sit well with theologically conservative evangelicals like me who are practising charismatics to boot!

What must be our primary response when this government enacts laws that violate our Christian conscience?

Judging by the apostle Paul’s advice to his young protégé Timothy, there is only one action that we can control. Prayer! We intercede for “kings and all those in authority.” That’s it. Period.

Badmouthing the government. Criticizing the Premier. Focusing on her sexual orientation. None of these is as an option that will bring about the positive change that prayer will!

On the contrary, it will give rise to anger and judgment which will only trigger the law of sowing and reaping. We ourselves will end up being the targets of anger and the recipients of judgment.

It reminded me of a time when I was under attack by a segment of the church I was pastoring at the time. Whenever I focused on the hurt they were inflicting upon me, I was the one who was getting angry, resentful and bitter. It was beginning to creep into my sermons. Not good at all.

Around that time, I was at a Conference where R.T. Kendall was teaching on the power of forgiveness. One thing he stressed was that we have not totally forgiven until we have asked God to bless those who stress us. After all, isn’t this is what Jesus told us to do in Luke 6:27-28? “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.”

I could not control what others were saying about me. I could not change their minds about me or the offense they took at what I had said or done. None of these were under my control.

All I could do was to focus on the only thing I could do that would honour Jesus. Not only did I forgive them, but I went on to ask God to bless them and indeed declared blessing over their families, jobs, businesses and relationships.

I would like to say that they all changed their minds and we all lived happily ever after. Not! But I had the satisfaction of knowing that I did what I could control and left the rest to God. Let’s just say that He took care of me just fine!

Dear DWOD friend, on the road to your destiny you too will face times such as these when your hands are tied. You cannot take matters into your own hands and change things around. You too would be wise to follow Scriptural directives such as the ones in this post.

We would love to hear from you about similar situations that you have faced and Scriptures that guided you during those times. Please share them with the rest of your DWOD family, will you? Thanks in advance.

June 11, 2014–Wanted: Your Testimony

was blind but now I see“The man they call Jesus made some mud and put it on my eyes. He told me to go to Siloam and wash. So I went and washed, and then I could see.”

“One thing I do know. I was blind but now I see!” (John 9:11, 25)

Every Sunday evening at Morgan’s Point United Church we have been offering what we call a Good News Gathering. The format is very simple. We begin with a time of refreshments at 6 p.m. At 6:30 we have a time of praise and worship. Then we go around the room and ask anyone who has a praise report to share it. Following this time of sharing, one of our members shares their personal testimony. Then we break up into small groups and pray for one another.

The primary purpose of this gathering is to share with those who have not yet made a commitment to follow Jesus fully how their lives can be changed when they choose Him to be their Lord and their Saviour. “If He can do it for me, He can do it for you as well!”

As an added bonus, it also provides an opportunity for those who are further along in their faith walk with Jesus to make connections with those who are just on their way (or about to get going) and disciple them.

When I tell friends outside our congregation about the Good News Gatherings, the first question they ask is: “How do you find so many people who are willing to share their testimony in a relatively small community such as yours?”

My answer is very simple: We teach them to keep it simple. This way it does not seem foreboding in any way to those who are not used to sharing their testimony to put it all together.

As a matter of fact, the verses quoted at the top of this post provide the framework for an effective testimony. You know the story of the man who was born blind receiving his sight. This causes quite a stir among the religious leaders. They question him repeatedly to discover how exactly this amazing change had come about.

The blind man’s response is very simple. There are three distinct parts in his response that constitute the essential elements of a testimony.

“I was blind.”

“Jesus made some mud and put it on my eyes. He told me to go to Siloam and wash. So I went and washed…”

“Now I see.”

We have made it easy to remember by teaching everyone who shares their testimony to use the following format:

B.J—What life was like Before Jesus.

E.J—How you Encountered Jesus.

A.J—How life has changed After Jesus became your Lord and Saviour.

Pretty simple, isn’t it? But don’t let the simplicity fool you. It is simply powerful when you put all three elements together.

Last Sunday, one of our DWOD subscribers, Lori Fournier shared her testimony using this format. Just so you know, when I first asked Lori to do this a couple of months back, she was very reluctant to comply with my request. She was not sure that her testimony would have much of an impact on anyone else. She was not ready. So I just left her alone.

On Sunday afternoon, Sulojana asked Lori to consider doing it that very same evening. She had a sense that the timing was the Lord’s. Thankfully, Lori, who hears well from the Lord herself, agreed.

We had four first-timers at the GNG that evening. Two of them were powerfully touched by Lori’s testimony. Great freedom came to them during prayer ministry.

Dear DWOD friend, do you have your testimony ready to be shared with others at short notice? You may wish to prepare it using the B.J., E.J. & A.J. template. You never know when a door will open up for you to share it with someone who needs to hear it at that particular moment.

Jesus wants your testimony to be shared. The world needs your testimony to be heard. You got it?

June 10, 2014–Considered the Cost of Broken Covenants?

Os Hillman 2014(Be blessed by this DWOD for June 10, 2014 by guest contributor Os Hillman)

“During the reign of David, there was a famine for three successive years; so David sought the face of the Lord.” (2 Samuel 21:1a)

There was a famine in the land, and David equated that famine to the blessing or lack of blessing from God. He sought God to know why there was a famine.

The Lord did not take long to answer: “It is on account of Saul and his blood-stained house; it is because he put the Gibeonites to death” (2 Sam. 21:1b). Many years earlier, when Joshua entered the Promised Land, the Israelites were tricked by the Gibeonites into believing they were travelers when they were actually enemies of Israel. The Gibeonites tricked Israel into making a peace treaty with them. It was one of the first major mistakes Israel made after entering the Promised Land.

As a result of the peace treaty, the Gibeonites were kept as slaves to Israel. This was never God’s intention for Israel. He had wanted Israel to destroy all their enemies, but they made an error in judgment that required that they honor a covenant with the Gibeonites.

Saul made a decision to disregard this covenant with the Gibeonites and sought to annihilate them. David sensed there was something preventing God’s blessing on Israel. As a nation they had violated a covenant made before God. Now they were reaping the consequences.

There are two things we can learn from this story.

First, when we make a covenant, God expects us to fulfill it. God is a covenant maker. He made one with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He made one with each of us through Jesus Christ. The Scriptures are numerous regarding the importance of honouring our commitments.

Second, God is a very longsuffering God. He gave Israel many years of grace before He exercised judgment for their sin. However, there always comes a day when God must uphold His standard of righteousness.

Are you failing to walk in God’s blessing due to some failed commitment? Calamities can befall us for many reasons; sin can be one of them.

In the case of Israel, David had to make things right with the Gibeonites. When he did this, God removed the famine, and Israel again was prosperous.

When you feel you lack God’s blessing on your life, ask the Lord if there are any broken covenants in your past—personally as well as generationally. Repent of them. Ask and receive forgiveness. Restore the broken relationships. Make restitution where needed. God may well be waiting on you before He can release His blessing on your life.

(Reprinted by permission from the author. Os Hillman is an international speaker and author of 15 books on workplace calling. To learn more, visit http://www.MarketplaceLeaders.org)

June 09, 2014–Do you leave them amazed and perplexed?

Jeeva & Sulojana Tree backgroundLast Sunday, as we were reading from Acts 2 about the Holy Spirit coming upon the 120, I was struck by this description of the bystanders’ reaction to all the commotion:

Amazed and perplexed, they asked one another, “What does this mean?” (Acts 2:12)

“This” refers to the inexplicable phenomenon of people from a number of language groups being able to hear the “wonderful works of God” declared in their particular language. What made this even more astounding is that the speakers were Galileans!

To get the full impact of the reference to Galileans, we need to remind ourselves that Peter, a fisherman by trade, was a Galilean, as was his brother Andrew. Ditto for James and John. In other words, these were not linguistics majors from a renowned university 🙂 As a matter of fact, fisherfolk were “sea” students who did not go to school as a rule!

No wonder these visitors to Jerusalem were amazed and perplexed by “this.”

The one positive attribute of this group was their desire to find out what it really meant. This is in stark contrast to another group of people who simply mocked the proceedings as a case of “too much new wine.”

Peter seizes the opportunity to provide an explanation of what was actually going on. He shows the Jewish pilgrims who had come to Jerusalem for the harvest festival of Pentecost how prophecies delivered by Joel were now being fulfilled in this most unusual manner.

For Peter to even have the opportunity to provide an answer however, first there had to be a reason for the people to ask the question. The inexplicable demands an explanation.

It is instructive to note that according to Peter’s explanation, the premier manifestation of the Spirit of God falling upon someone is the gift of prophecy. This actually would not have been too much of a stretch for the Jewish mind to grasp.

In Numbers 11:24-30, we read about how the Lord took a portion of the Spirit that rested upon Moses and gave it to 70 of his elders. What happened as a consequence? “When the Spirit rested on them, they prophesied—but did not do so again.” (v. 25)

Similarly, when Saul encountered a group of prophets, we are told that the Spirit of God came powerfully upon him, and he joined in their prophesying.” (I Samuel 10:10). In verse 13, we read that he had stopped prophesying after a while.

The Jewish experience was of the Spirit of God coming upon a select few. Some prophesied for a short spell. Others wore the mantle of the prophet. But now Peter declares that the Spirit of God was being poured out upon ALL people.

This explanation seemed to answer their question, as they now listen intently to the rest of his message.

To this day, quite often when we prophesy over someone who has never experienced this gift in operation, their response is very similar to that of the visitors to Jerusalem on that day of Pentecost: “How did you know that about me? You do not know me at all!” Or when God shows up and miraculously brings healing to an unbeliever, it shakes them up and they wonder how this is possible!

It is only when they are amazed and perplexed that they ask the question and are eager to receive the answer that the Lord gives them through us. No occurrence of the inexplicable, no requisition for an explanation which could potentially lead to their salvation as it did that day for 3000!

Dear DWOD friend, when the Spirit of God comes upon you, do you realize that you too are now a conduit through whom He can flow and cause signs, wonders and miracles to follow? This could potentially open the door to many meaningful conversations and life-transforming decisions.

So, let me ask you now: “Do you leave them amazed and perplexed?” What is your answer?

June 08, 2014–Would your boss lose sleep over you?

DanielandthelionsdenChances are very good that you were captivated by the story of Daniel in the lions’ den when you first heard it in Sunday School or read it for the first time later in life. The great miracle that God performed by tying up the lions’ mouths so impressed King Darius that he would proclaim:

“I decree that everyone throughout my kingdom should tremble with fear before the God of Daniel. For He is the living God…He performs miraculous signs and wonders in the heavens and on earth. He has rescued Daniel from the power of the lions.” (vs. 26-27)

I must confess that until recently I had not really paid a lot of attention to the verses that precede this incredible incident until my friend Pastor Ric Borozny brought them to my attention.

Daniel stood out among all the other officials in King Darius’ court to such an extent that “the king made plans to place him over the entire empire.” This, of course, triggered jealousy among the Babylonian officials who were ticked off that a Jewish transplant would supplant one of them.

So “the other administrators and high officers began searching for some fault in the way Daniel was handling government affairs, but they couldn’t find anything to criticize or condemn. He was faithful, always responsible, and completely trustworthy.” (vs. 3-4)

Wow! What a testimonial to Daniel’s character, work ethic and track record! Even his enemies had to admit that there was nothing they could pin on him, as far as his job was concerned.

The only way they could get him was with his faith. They persuade King Darius to sign a law that decreed the death penalty on all who worshipped anyone other than the king. Sure enough, Daniel is caught red-handed on his knees. The king has to abide by the law and condemn Daniel to be thrown into the lions’ den.

I must admit that v. 14 caught me completely caught off guard, though. The king was deeply troubled, and he tried to think of a way to save Daniel. He spent the rest of the day looking for a way to get Daniel out of this predicament.”

Double Wow! The same king who was bound by law to put Daniel to death delays the administration of the penalty for a whole day so he could somehow come up with a loophole that would spare Daniel’s life.

What was responsible for King Darius taking such an extraordinary measure?  In v. 3 we are told the reason: “Daniel distinguished himself above the governors and satraps, because an excellent spirit was in him.”

It was Daniel’s commitment to excellence in all he did in his regular job that caught the king’s eye.

Regardless of his fondness for Daniel, Darius had no choice but to have Daniel thrown in the den. Here is what the king did right after. “Then the king returned to his palace and spent the night fasting. He refused his usual entertainment and couldn’t sleep at all that night.” (v. 18)

Triple Wow! The king fasts, shuns his regular fill of pleasure and stays awake all night. All because of Daniel.

Dear DWOD friend, are you so committed to excellence in all that you do at your present position that your boss loses sleep when misfortune befalls you?

He/she would, if you would heed these words of the apostle Paul in Colossians 3:22-25: “And don’t just do the minimum that will get you by. Do your best. Work from the heart for your real Master…Keep in mind always that the ultimate Master you’re serving is Christ…Being a follower of Jesus doesn’t cover up bad work.”