[Great Verses] Is There Anything Too Hard for the Lord?نموونە
Is there something impossible for God?
Abraham sits under the shade of his Bedouin tents in the stifling desert heat. That’s when he notices them: three men, just standing there. Moved by the Bedouin hospitality of the Middle East, Abraham scurries to serve them.
At some point, it becomes clear to Abraham that one of these men is none other than God in human form (most likely the pre-incarnate Christ). God promises Abraham that in one year, his wife, the ninety-year-old Sarah, will give birth to a son. Sarah, meanwhile, is eavesdropping from inside the tent. When she hears this incredible promise, she laughs to herself in disbelief: “No way.”
God, knowing all things, knows that Sarah laughed and why Sarah laughed. He responds, interestingly, to Abraham: “The Lord said to Abraham, “Why did Sarah laugh and say, ‘Shall I indeed bear a child, now that I am old?’ Is anything too hard for the Lord? At the appointed time I will return to you, about this time next year, and Sarah shall have a son” (Gen.18:13–14). The question “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” is etched in my mind. It echoes in my heart. I can’t get away from it.
“Is anything too hard for the Lord?”
God says to me and to you, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” Is anything too hard for the God who spoke the sun and the stars into existence? Is anything too hard for the God who raises the dead? What are you facing today that seems impossible? Do you need healing? Do you have a teenager headed for disaster? Do you have a marriage that needs a miracle? Would you love to have a baby? Do you have a hopeless addiction? Is there a non-Christian loved one who is hardened against God? Does your problem seem impossible?
God’s word to Sarah is God’s word to you. Never forget God’s question: “Is anything too hard for the Lord?”
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About this Plan
On many occasions, we tend to doubt what God can do. We may not openly recognize it, but our attitudes of self-reliance, of having better ideas than God, or of helping God demonstrates it. This three-day devotional exposes the hearts of three people: Sarah, Abraham, and Jacob. There are interesting things to learn from their lives.
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