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9780310216278

More Precious Than Silver : 366 Daily Devotional Readings

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780310216278

  • ISBN10:

    0310216273

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1998-10-01
  • Publisher: Zondervan

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Summary

Has Your Heart Been Touched by Silver? Joni Eareckson Tada peers into the treasury of Scripture -- pure as refined silver, cleansing what it touches. More Precious Than Silver reveals surpassing wealth in the subtle things we overlook as we chase life's golden glitter. This year's worth of wise, insightful devotions will show you why nothing can compare to the riches of a heart that's known the silver touch of God's Word. Includes photos and illustrations by Joni.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

January 1
The Lord Out Ahead
By day the Lord went ahead of them.
— Exodus 13:21
I like the idea of a new year. It’s a turning point where you say good-bye to the past and get charged up about the future.
True, I could be weighed down thinking of last year’s trip-ups, those embarrassing things that still nag. I had a bad disagreement with Ken a couple of months ago; I disappointed a dear friend earlier in the summer; I spoke at an event back east and my message fell flat. No prayer behind it, no real preparation, I realized later. And there was that tough business decision that caused a lot of tension between Ken, me, and a family in our church. If I had to do it all over again, I’d change a lot.
You probably have your own list of things you wish you could change. If we thought about it long enough, we could become so heavyhearted that we wouldn’t want to face the future. But thankfully, God is the God of all those past months. He was as much in control then as he is now.
What a relief! Because you’d better believe that the coming months will have the same sort of blunders, mistakes, and embarrassing faux pas. But wait . . .
God has gone before you! He’s already there, up front, out ahead. And he will guard you with his grace and help you learn from past mistakes. For certain this year I’ll be more careful in my relationship with my husband. I’ll give business decisions more thought. And needless to say, I’m fully committed to being prepared and prayed up for every speaking engagement.
Before this year gets going, reflect upon last year. Page through your calendar and pray over those places, people, and decisions from which you can learn. Take inventory, then roll up your sleeves and get started. Hurray, the Lord has gone before you!
What comfort, Lord, to know that as I turn the corner into this new year, you have gone before me. You have carved out a path for me and covered it in your protection.

January 2
Repentance and the Rose Bowl
Save me from bloodguilt, O God, the God who saves me, and my tongue will sing of your righteousness.
— Psalm 51:14
One New Year’s Day while Ken and I and a friend of ours were watching a football game on television, we heard a horrible crash outside, followed by the sound of a car zooming away. As we rushed out the door, we found part of our lawn torn up by tire tracks, our mailbox smashed, and our friend’s Mustang mangled.
A few minutes later we heard a gentle rap on our front door. Two boys about twelve years old were standing there. Red-faced and quivering, they were too frightened to speak. I asked, “Did one of you drive the vehicle that crashed into my friend’s car?”
“Yes, ma’am,” the slightly taller boy answered.
As the boys told us their story, I was grateful for guilt, that heavy weight on our consciences when we’ve done something wrong. The more we respond to guilt, the more sensitive we become to wrongdoing. For the two boys, confessing was important in keeping their consciences sensitive. A clear conscience, according to Bill Gothard, “is that inner freedom of spirit and assurance from knowing that you have a transparency toward everyone; and that no one is able to accuse you of wrongs that you have never made ‘right.’ ”
Turns out that while the “driver’s” parents were attending a game at the Rose Bowl — the game we were watching on TV — the boy invited his friend for a joyride in his dad’s Mercedes. Ultimately the insurance company paid for repairs, the boys were grounded, and we had a chance to witness to a neighbor. Best of all, the consciences of those two boys had become softened. That’s how that story ended.
If guilt is crushing your conscience, how will your story end? Will you speed away? Or will you go back to confess to God? Acts 24:16 describes the Christian: “I strive always to keep my conscience clear before God and man.”
Thank you, Father, that you have equipped us with a warning device in our hearts that alerts us when we need to confess a deed or word.
January 3
God’s Autobiography
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
— John 1:1
Novelist Robertson Davies once wrote, “To ask an author . . . if his work is autobiographical is like asking a spider where he buys his thread.” No author ever weaves words from someone else’s being. They are always his words, reflecting his soul.
The Bible reveals God’s soul to us in a way that no other book is able to do. It is history, wisdom, and poetry. It is unparalleled as a compendium of theology, philosophy, and ethics. It is a gospel tract, distilling the essence of our relationship to the Lord, but it is also an epic, introducing us to the immensity of an eternal God.
Though the Bible contains all these things, it is at its heart an autobiography. The Bible is all about God. Through even the most twisted and unlikely narratives, some even tawdry, we see God’s soul reflected to us. God is revealed as Jacob wrestles with him. God is showcased through the complaint of Job, the anguish of Jeremiah, and the courage of Hannah. God is the voice behind the people’s shouting and singing over the new temple of Solomon; he is the echo behind the weeping over the rebuilt temple of Ezra. God is the silence of the four centuries before Christ, and the exultant glory in the night sky of Bethlehem.
Every word speaks something to us of his soul. It is not just from the prophets’ mouths that we hear his lament over Israel. We hear it in the very telling of the captivity itself. It is not just from John’s apocalyptic pen that we learn of God’s coming judgment. We can see God’s wrath reflected in the agony of his Son on the cross. It is not just from Jesus’ mouth that we learn of God’s love. We know from Jesus’ daily walk with sinners like you and me.
Treasure God’s Word today. In everything you read, you will come to know the soul of God, he who is the lover of your soul.
Father, write your words on my heart today, that I might be your story written to a lost and dying world.

Excerpted from More Precious Than Silver: 366 Daily Devotional Readings by Joni Eareckson Tada
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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