Author: Allan (Page 259 of 492)

Cowboys Fall Back to .500

CowboyJoeBlackWhiteCowboys fans will tell you their team is right back where it belongs opening up the 2015 season: in the primest of prime time slots, at home, hosting a division rival, on Sunday Night Football, with the whole world watching. A 12-4 division winner from a year ago is always going to be in the conversation. But when that team is the Cowboys, opening up the NFL season in the premier TV spot is a given. Expectations are high. Dez has a brand new contract, Sean Lee is completely healthy, and Jerry Wayne has two brand new hips. The One Billion Dollar Food Court will be rockin’ Sunday night.

But for how long?

In the category of “If You Can’t Say Anything Negative About the Cowboys, Then Don’t Say Anything At All,” I bring you my game-by-game predictions on the 2015 season.

JerryJonesOverbiteSunday Night Football v. Giants – The Cowboys have won five of the past six meetings against the Giants and they’ll probably take this one, too. New York is playing without their best pass rusher and their left tackle. Dallas’ passing game clicks early and often with Tony Romo finding Witten, Dez, and Cole Beasley for touchdowns. And that’s a good thing because the running game doesn’t go anywhere. Darren McFadden gets the start and manages only 29 yards on 15 carries, with four runs for negative yardage. The other bad news is that linebacker Sean Lee was injured as he trotted onto the field for the first play of the game. He ran into a member of the kicking team coming off the field, tearing a ligament in his right ankle. Lee will be out four to six weeks. Cowboys win 24-13.

JerryJonesShirtCroppedSeptember 20 at Eagles – Philly spent so much money over the summer pulling DeMarco Murray away from Dallas, the team cannot afford to buy their players any socks or shoes. Or a quarterback. No problem, as Sam Bradford only has to hand off to a motivated Murray who runs for 125 yards and two scores in a 17-10 Eagles win. Christine Michael gets the start at running back for Dallas, but he gains only 22 yards and fumbles twice. It’s starting to look like Dallas can’t run the ball and teams are pinning their ears back to rush Romo, who was sacked four times in the loss.

September 27 v. Falcons – Dallas starts Joseph Randle at running back and he explodes for 111 yards and two scores in a 31-24 Cowboys win. After the game, Randle awards all his offensive linemen gift boxes of cologne and fancy underwear from Dillard’s. When the underwear doesn’t fit, Randle is unable to provide his teammates with receipts.

JerryWaynePicksOctober 4 at Saints – Drew Brees lights up the Cowboys secondary in a blowout win, 35-17. But the game will be remembered for Saints defensive coordinator Rob Ryan suffering a massive heart attack on the sidelines during the third quarter. Paramedics were confused when they first reached Ryan, mistaking the barbecue sauce on his chin and around his neck for blood. Romo gets banged up pretty badly in this one. Randle runs for only 19 yards and the offensive line is having problems picking up the increased blitzes. Dez Bryant was picked up by the TV cameras several times yelling at Romo and at offensive coordinator Scott Linehan.

JerryWayneSmilingOctober 11 v. Patriots – Greg Hardy makes his Cowboys debut against the reigning Super Bowl champs. Hardy was suspended by the NFL and cut by the Panthers last year after he was accused of strangling his girlfriend and assaulting her on a bed of automatic weapons. So the Cowboys scooped him right up! Why not? It’s not like they’re having to compromise any values. It’s not like the Cowboys’ reputation for stuff like this could get any worse. This happens every summer, doesn’t it? Cowboys fans are forced every off season to make a new moral judgment on whether they can really cheer for a team that keeps signing criminals like this. Speaking of criminals, Tom Brady throws for a season-high five TDs with properly inflated footballs and the Pats win in a blowout, 36-10. The tailback position has become a revolving door of failure. Lance Dunbar starts this game and finishes with one yard rushing on eight carries and a fumble. With no running game to speak of, Dez Bryant is getting triple-teamed on almost every play. He finishes with one catch and seven lip-read curse words on national TV. After the game, Jason Garrett accused the Patriots of tampering with their coaches headsets until he was reminded that they were in AT&T Stadium. On a side note, Greg Hardy sacked Brady early in the second quarter and Chris Christy, in the owner’s luxury suite, hugged Jerry Wayne so hard that one of his hips cracked. The Cowboys limp into the bye week at 2-3.

Bye Week – What else? The Dez Bryant video from the shopping mall parking lot that’s been rumored to exist for two years finally surfaces. TMZ features it in a 30-minute special called “I’m not Michael Irvin!” Is this the most “Cowboys” thing that could happen during the bye week, or what? Delicious! While he’s getting his hip repaired, Jerry Wayne orders all the team’s cell phones destroyed. He also fires Linehan and signs Tim Tebow as a running back.

JerryWayneAngry

November 1 v. Seahawks – The Cowboys lose the game and their quarterback. Romo goes down after being sandwiched by two Seattle defenders late in the second quarter. Garrett decides not having a quarterback is a better option than inserting Brandon Weeden into the game. Dallas goes on to lose 93-10. Romo has a lacerated kidney. Dez Bryant demands a trade.

November 8 v. Eagles – Tough to watch this one. Dallas re-signs Tebow during the week to play quarterback while Romo undergoes surgery on his damaged kidney, promising the former Heisman winner he can break each offensive huddle with “Glory to God!” Rolando Mclain and Greg Hardy wreak havoc in the Philly backfield, forcing Sam Bradford into four interceptions. But the Cowboys offense can’t get in the endzone. The Eagles win it 6-3.

JerryWaynePointerNovember 15 at Buccaneers – Against all reason and common sense, Romo starts at quarterback against Tampa Bay. Maybe it’s not really that surprising. The Cowboys allowed him to play several games last season with a broken back. So, why not push him out there in between dialysis procedures? While investigating the events surrounding Romo’s condition, reporters discover that Jerry Wayne has been personally administering the team’s concussion protocol exams during games all season. Jameis Winston throws three picks, but rushes for three touchdowns and the Bucs beat Dallas 28-20. Dez Bryant demands a trade.

November 22 at Dolphins – In a matchup between the league’s best offensive line and best defensive line, the D wins it 27-24. Ndamukong Suh makes three sacks and six quarterback pressures in Miami’s close win. Dez Bryant gets into a shoving match with Garrett and Witten on the sidelines during the third quarter. That night, Skip Bayless says Dez should be able to call his own plays.

JerryWaynePJsNovember 26 v. Panthers – Greg Hardy is pumped to play against his old team and (cough) strangles the Carolina offense in a 33-20 Thanksgiving Day Cowboys win. The Dallas running game finally gets on track and Romo and Dez hook up for three touchdowns. However, Sean Lee chokes on a turkey bone after the game and is hospitalized with a lacerated esophagus. He’s day-to-day. Still.

December 7 at Redskins – The Monday Night game is overshadowed a bit by a protest group storming the field during the third quarter, demanding Daniel Snyder rename his team the Washington First Americans. They scatter when Greg Hardy and Joseph Randle pull out their guns. Behind 330 yards passing by Romo and three interceptions by Morris Claiborne, the Cowboys destroy Washington 42-14. Dallas has stumbled quite a bit this year, but they’re only one game back of the Giants in the pathetic NFC East.

JerryWayneInVegasDecember 13 at Packers – This one does not come down to a controversial catch. Aaron Rodgers blows it open and has time to film three new State Farm commercials during the fourth quarter. The Cowboys lose 34-13 to fall to 5-8. They have to win their final three games to get to 8-8 and any shot at the playoffs. In the worst division in football, this is possible.

December 19 v. Jets – Darren McFadden has emerged by now as the Cowboys top running back, but that’s not saying much. He hasn’t run for a hundred yards in a game yet and Romo is under constant pressure from blitzes and Dez is now being quadruple-teamed on every play. Dallas is finally able to capitalize. McFadden hits the gaps hard and gains a hundred yards in a game for the first time this season in a 13-10 Cowboys win.

December 27 at Bills – A desperate Cowboys team finds a way to win in below freezing temperatures in Buffalo. Sean Lee, playing on crutches, intercepts a pass and laterals to Tim Tebow, who’s playing cornerback, who then runs it back for the game-winning score. Dallas wins it 17-16.

CowboysHelmetSmallJanuary 3 v. Washington – Snyder has officially changed the team name to the Washington Senators to appease the congressmen who are threatening a federal hearing into the team’s discriminatory moniker. The Cowboys are scoreboard watching throughout their 28-17 win. Moments after the victory, Philadelphia wins at home to finish 9-7 and takes the only playoff berth from the NFC East. Jerry Wayne weeps and blows his nose on Chris Christie’s red “good luck” sweater. Jason Witten announces his retirement. Tony Romo discloses that he’s been playing all year with a separated shoulder and a torn Achilles tendon. Greg Hardy holds police at bay for six hours overnight in a televised stand-off with police. Dez Bryant demands a trade.

Peace,

Allan

Faithfulness

GloryClouds

This week we’ve been considering together Act Three of the Story of God: Covenant – The Promised Kingdom. Instead of trying to write about and discuss Genesis 12 through Malachi 4, I’ve tried to identify four things I believe God is doing with the covenant he made to Abraham in Genesis 12 and in the ways he works with and through the covenant in the rest of the Old Testament. God is showing us four things, he’s communicating these four things to us. My suggestion is to identify these four things in every Old Testament story you read. Look for these things. It’ll help you better understand what God is doing when he makes and keeps his promises.

We’ve looked at Revelation, Presence, and Partnership. Today, let’s consider God’s Faithfulness.

We can know for certain a couple of things by reading the Old Testament and by just experiencing life. We know for sure that Satan has not lost interest in people since his big win in the Garden of Eden in Act One. He keeps coming at us. We also know that our God never, ever, stops in his love and care for the people and the world he created. The devil keeps trying and God keeps saving. We know this. Throughout Act Three, we see Israel chasing after pagan idols and God forever restoring them to their right ways. We Israel rebel against God, we see wickedness in Israel’s priests and kings, we see sin. And we see God relentlessly bringing them back. Our God will not be stopped.

In the covenant, God says, “I will bless you if you live right” and “I will take care of you if you obey my commands.” If not, well, then God makes other arrangements to bless his people. He finds other ways to save them.

“I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your impurities and from all your idols. I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees and be careful to keep my laws. You will live in the land I gave your forefathers; you will be my people, and I will be your God.” ~Ezekiel 36:25-28

If your heart is hard, I’ll give you a new one. If your mind is corrupted, I’ll create in you a new one. Over and over again  in Act Three, God proves that he will do whatever it takes to live with his people and be their God. Whatever it takes. Because it’s his covenant. His promise. His Word. And he won’t let it be broken.

He gives Noah the rainbow covenant and Noah immediately gets drunk and exposes himself. Yet God’s promise goes on. He gives Israel the Sinai covenant and the people immediately build a golden calf. Yet God’s covenant remains intact. He gives David the royal covenant the king after God’s own heart immediately grabs his neighbor’s wife and breaks half the ten commandments in one weekend. Yet God’s promise remains. God keeps finding other ways. He keeps making other arrangements. His covenant will never be broken.

Your job is to believe it. Believe it. Abraham believed and God credited it to him as righteousness. If you believe God’s Word, if you trust him that he’s going to save you and that he will not be stopped in fulfilling his promises to you and to the whole world, he’ll consider that as faith. And he’ll give you credit. He’ll apply a righteousness to you, a holiness, that you don’t have and you can never receive any other way.

“The promise comes by faith, so that it may be by grace and may be guaranteed to all Abraham’s offspring — not only to those who are of the law but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham. He is the father of all… He is our father in the sight of God, in whom he believed — the God who gives life to the dead and calls things that are not as though they were.

Abraham in hope believed and so became the father of many nations… He did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised.” ~Romans 4:16-21

If God has promised you life: life in Christ, life in the Spirit of God, a life of bearing Kingdom fruit — if he’s promised you life in his body, the Church — and if he’s ratified those promises by the blood of his own Son, Jesus the Christ, the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world, do you believe it?

Peace,

Allan

Partnership

AngelsLongToLook

“All peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” ~Genesis 12:3

God calls his people and saves them and changes them in order to bless the whole world. He pulls them out of Egypt, he rescues them from slavery, and he gathers them to his presence on the mountain to commission them for his work on behalf of all the earth.

“You yourselves have seen what I did to Egypt, and how I carried you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession. Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” ~Exodus 19:4-6

Israel belongs to God. And, yes, they are called out to be separate from the world. But they are not separate in that they live in isolation from the other nations. As holy and priestly, Israel’s purpose is to save and bless the entire world in a partnership with God. The covenant is international in scope. It’s global. Israel is saved, not just for Israel’s sake, but so God can work through them to save all of humanity.

When God’s people break the covenant, when they live their lives in ways that are not holy, yes, it has serious implications for their relationship with God. But, much bigger than that, it thwarts the salvation plans of heaven for everybody else. In the exile, when Israel felt the full weight of the consequences of her disobedience, the focus in Scripture is on how it’s impacting the salvation of the rest of the world.

“It is too small a thing for you to be my servant to restore the tribes of Jacob  and bring back those of Israel I have kept. I will also make you a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring my salvation to the ends of the earth.” ~Isaiah 49:6

Even in the darkest period of Israel’s history, when her own release from captivity was the most pressing concern, God reminds his people of the bigger picture. He reminds them that it’s not just about them. Why are they going to be released? Why are they going to be saved? For the sake of others, not themselves. To use God’s blessings to bring salvation to the rest of the world.

We are covenant partners with the God of Heaven and Earth.

Somehow, though, we have encouraged the question, “What can God do for me?” or “What can the Church do for me?” Somehow, we’ve nurtured a culture that’s concerned with, “What can I get out of believing in God? or “What can I get out of going to Church?” Somehow, we’ve fostered an attitude that being a Christian means not much more than going to church to ask God for what we need and to thank him for what he’s given us. And that’s all. No wonder strong, smart, healthy people are completely bored out of their minds with church! And Christianity!

We are not just creatures of God. We are creatures uniquely made in God’s image, equipped by God and empowered by God as God’s partners in and for the world. We are partners whom God has invited and commanded to join his business of preserving and caring for the world. Of doing justice and showing compassion in human society. Sharing the suffering of those who suffer and freeing those who are enslaved by their own sins and oppressed by the sins of others.

Being in covenant with God is not a passive thing. It’s not just hanging around the church building waiting for Jesus to come back. It’s not like just sitting in the dark, eating your popcorn and talking to your friend, while you wait for the movie to start. We’re in the movie! We’re in the play! By virtue of the covenant, we’ve all been given and have all accepted the holy responsibility to advance the salvation cause of our God.

Peace,

Allan

Sixteen and Licensed

16thTruckTurning sixteen is one of those magic moments in a person’s life. It’s not quite a watershed, it doesn’t change everything. But it’s highly significant. At sixteen, it seems like you’ve finally moved beyond the troubling middle school and Freshman years of uncertainty, the awkwardness of searching for yourself and forming an identity. It seems that, at sixteen, you’ve finally figured out a few things and are well on your way to knowing who you are and where you’re going. There’s more confidence at sixteen, more assurance, more stability. At least, that’s what it looks like on the outside. Inside the brain and heart and emotions of a sixteen-year-old girl, I really have no idea. I’m only guessing.

Our youngest daughter, our Little Bear, Carley Renae, turned sweet sixteen today. And, yeah, it’s magic.

She passed her drivers license test this morning. The State of Texas has determined that she’s ready mentally and physically and has the skill set to drive a motor vehicle on the public roads. Today, Carley inherits the 2002 Ford Ranger, the little pickup all three of our girls have now used as their first car. She’s already purchased a new steering wheel cover and a license plate frame to personalize it just for her. A little more bling than it’s ever had. It’s hard to believe that when we first bought it brand new, all five of us could fit in that tiny thing at the same time. Since those days it’s had the back bumper replaced twice, the front bumper and grill replaced once, one quarter panel repaired, one windshield replaced, and it’s been totaled by the insurance company due to hail damage. Come on, Carley; you’ve got to make this thing go at least three more years.

CarleyBearBirthday5Carley’s always been our most athletic daughter and she’s becoming more so all the time. This week, Carley finished just three strokes off from representing the Canyon High School girls golf team at this weekend’s tournament. Until four months ago, she had never picked up a golf club in her life! She’s close, really close. And I’m very proud of her for being so determined to start up something brand new and work so hard at it like she’s done. She’s very talented. And competitive. She plays ping-pong like a crazy woman. She wants to race everybody all the time. She wants to punch me and kick me and pretend that I can’t still take her down and out anytime I feel like it.

She’s also pretty stinkin’ smart. Straight A’s. Every report card, every time. Right now she’s in the Top 20 in her sophomore class and has designs on Top Ten and higher by the time she graduates. She can pen a beautiful poem, raise and show a rabbit for the FFA, ace a physics exam, and build a paper mache’ elephant in the same week. She’s brilliant.

And she’s funny. She’s become a Seinfeld and Simpsons freak; a girl after my own heart. She notices things that are subtly humorous or ironic that not everybody appreciates. And she points it out. She sees the folly in presidential politics and daytime TV. She has an affinity for Airplane! and Naked Gun. She makes weird faces and strange noises with her friends. And sometimes in her room by herself.

CarleyFishThose things all make me smile. I truly enjoy her company. I love doing things with her because I know we’re always going to laugh. I have to sit by Carley when we go to a choir concert or a school play or some other social function because we always wind up laughing together about things nobody else around us can get. It thrills me to read her writings, I’m inspired by her art, and I can’t wait to watch her play golf.

For all those blessings, I’m thankful. Carley fills my life with joy and happiness.

But the thing that gives me pause, the thing that makes me stop and reflect, is the fact that, like it or not, she’s not a little kid anymore. She’s not. Carley has become a beautiful young lady. We’re in a weird transition together now. She’s learning how to be an adult and I’m learning how to treat her like one. We’re not there yet — neither one of us. But we’re in that transition.

And I thank God that she has her eyes on him as we do this. Carley is more focused CarleyWithClarksCat2on her Lord, more interested in his mission, more in tune with his will for her life and his creation than she’s ever been. She’s taking leadership roles within the student ministry and in our congregation. She’s active in our covenant group with an intergenerational mix of different backgrounds and experiences. She’s asking the questions. She’s singing the songs and praying the psalms. She’s in the Word. Our Christian faith is becoming hers. And it’s really cool to watch.

I love you, Carley, and I’m so very proud of you. Sometimes you’ll make a face or do something that causes me to see you as a first grader. I see you as that super cute five- or six-year-old with the perfect eyebrows and snaggle-teeth. Other times you’ll say something or react in some way that causes me to see you for where I imagine you’ll be in college in the next four or five years or married or working somewhere in your 30s. I see you as grown up. You’re on your way, sweetie. You’re running your race. And you’re doing it very well.

I love you,

Dad

Presence

Tabernacle

“I will establish my covenant as an everlasting covenant between me and you and your descendants after you for the generations to come, to be your God and the God of your descendants after you.” ~Genesis 17:7

We’re going to be together. We’re going to live together, just like in the garden in the very beginning. God says we’re going to occupy the same places together just like in Act One. The covenant is about God being visibly, physically present with his people.

When he delivers them from Egypt, God leads them from a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. Scripture tells us neither pillar “left its place in front of the people.”

And then God brings his people to a mountain in the middle of the desert and he tells them the details of the covenant. God is right there, physically and visibly on the mountain. There’s smoke and fire, thunder and lightning. The people are trembling with fear.

“They offered burnt offerings and sacrificed young bulls as fellowship offerings to the LORD. Moses took half of the blood and put it in bowls, and the other half he sprinkled on the altar. Then he took the Book of the Covenant and read it to the people. They responded, ‘We will do everything the LORD has said; we will obey.’

Moses then took the blood, sprinkled it on the people and said, ‘This is the blood of the covenant that the LORD has made with you in accordance with all these words.’

Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and the seventy elders of Israel went up and saw the God of Israel. Under his feet was something like a pavement made of sapphire, clear as the sky itself. But God did not raise his hand against these leaders of the Israelites; they saw God, and they ate and drank.” ~Exodus 24:5-11

God uses the blood of the covenant, the blood of the sacrifice, to cleanse his people so they can sit down together and share a meal. They saw God and they ate and drank. The blood made them righteous. Because of the blood, God considered them holy, so they could be right there in his face-to-face presence. Eating together! With God! It’s remarkable! But that kind of proximity, that kind of physical relationship and presence, is what God and the humans had in the garden in Act One. And that’s what God is working to restore with his covenant.

God longs to physically live with his people. So, next, he tells them to build him a tent.

“Then I will dwell among the Israelites and be their God. They will know that I am the LORD their God who brought them out of Egypt so that I might dwell among them.” ~Exodus 29:45-46

“I will put my dwelling place among you… I will walk among you and be your God and you will be my people.” ~Leviticus 26:11-12

This is the promise, this is the language through the rest of the Old Testament. I will live with you; you will be my people and I will be your God. At the tabernacle. At the temple. Five times in Ezekiel. Five times in Jeremiah. Three times in Zechariah. God gives us his covenant so we can live together with him in his presence.

Peace,

Allan

Revelation

EscapeValerie bought her first car yesterday: a 2008 Ford Escape with just 46,000 miles and one previous owner. Leather seats. Moon roof. Power everything. And clean. A far cry from the ’74 Monte Carlo I bought with roofing money when I was sixteen. This is a pretty sweet ride. Her mom and I matched the money she had saved and now Val’s cruising around campus and Canyon in her own set of wheels. Her “whip,” she calls it. I have no idea what that means.

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GloryGod gives us his covenant and he works through his covenant to reveal himself. He tells us who he is, he shows the world who he is, by his covenant actions with his people. In Exodus 34, God does not destroy his people after the golden calf incident, although he wants to. Moses talks him out of it. Instead, God reveals his glory to Moses. He tells Moses his full name, he discloses to his people exactly who he is:

“The LORD, the LORD, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion, and sin.” ~Exodus 34:6-7

It’s such an important revelation of God that it’s quoted nine times in the Old Testament. This is who God is. These are his eternal characteristics, his eternal nature. And you find these character traits on display as God keeps his covenant Word to his people. It’s a very helpful exercise in reading and interpreting the Bible, I think, to look for these characteristics in every passage. Is revealing his compassion here? Is God demonstrating his patience here? Is this where God shows me that he’s forgiving? It’s important to God that we know him; we should look for it in his Scriptures.

There’s a well known Assyrian prayer that’s titled “A Prayer to Every God.” And in this pagan prayer, the worshiper is trying to appease a god from his anger over some offense the worshiper has committed. There are only two problems: One, he doesn’t know which god is angry and, two, he doesn’t know what he did wrong. So he makes a bunch of confessions to sins he doesn’t know if he’s committed or not. And each confession is addressed to “the god I do know or the god I do not know.” Maybe he’s eaten a forbidden fruit he knows nothing about. Maybe he accidentally wandered into a sacred space nobody told him about. The prayer is so frustrating and hopeless. You can hear the desperation at the end:

“Although I am constantly looking for help, no one takes me by the hand;
when I weep, they do not come to my side.
I utter laments, but no one hears me;
I am troubled; I am overwhelmed; I cannot see…
Man is dumb; he knows nothing;
mankind, everyone that exists — what does he know?
Whether he is committing sin or doing good, he does not ever know.”

This is how we would be without revelation. That’s why the covenant is so important, that’s why God’s law was such a treasure to Israel: because God had spoken to them. In an act of divine grace, God communicates to his people what pleases him and what angers him. We don’t have to guess.

Today, we look back at some of the Old Testament laws and we criticize the strictness and we question the seeming arbitrariness of some of it. But you don’t get that reaction from the Hebrews themselves. They seemed rather relieved that their God had agreed to define a relationship with them.

The covenant is about revelation.

When God’s planning and raining down the ten plagues on Egypt, he states over and over again it’s so “you will know that I am the Lord” and so “all of Egypt will know that I am the Lord.” When the Israelites were getting close to Jericho, Rahab told the two spies they were all afraid because they had heard about what God did to Egypt. She claimed their hearts had all melted at the news “for the LORD your God is God in heaven above and on the earth below.” When the Israelites cross the Jordan River, the people are told that God divided the waters “so that all the peoples of the earth might know that the hand of the LORD is powerful and so that you might always fear the LORD your God.”

When you have a covenant with God, you no longer have a remote, unapproachable God. You have a God you can know. A God you can count on. It’s important to God that we know who he is. And he reveals himself in clear terms though his covenant actions in Act Three.

Peace,

Allan

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