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From Walker to Walker

April 23, 2017

April 23, 2017 • Dr Charles Kyker

Aging, none of us are exempt. And death, it is on the calendar for every one who has ever lived. In Psalm Ninety, the only psalm attributed to Moses, he says the Lord sweeps “people away like dreams that disappear” and that people “are like grass that springs up in the morning. In the morning it blooms and flourishes, but by evening it is dry and withered” (Psalm 90:5-6). But in this psalm Moses also recognizes that from the beginning and through it all, God is our home—our place of safety and refuge. He alone is the ultimate Father who loves us and cares for us.

More from More

What Men What More of and Their Struggles

June 18, 2017 • Dr Charles Kyker

Solomon started out well when he first became king of Israel. Solomon honestly acknowledged his inexperience in leading God’s chosen people, a nation so great and numerous they could not be counted. So when God appeared to him at Gibeon in a dream and asked the young ruler: “What do you want? Ask, and I will give it to you” (1 Kings 3:5), Solomon asked for wisdom. The Lord was pleased to answer his request. Not only did God give Solomon wisdom to lead, He gave him much more. In fact, no king in all the world could be compared to him.

Respect

June 11, 2017 • Trent Jones

Toward the end of David’s reign, David commanded a census be taken of God’s people. It took his commander, Joab, nine months and twenty days to complete the pain-staking task of counting the number of capable warriors ‘from Dan in the north to Beersheba in the south’. David wanted to know how many were in Israel and he found out that he had over a million capable men ready for war. “But after he had taken the census, David’s conscience began to bother him” (2 Samuel 24:10a). Why was David convicted? At one point, David himself penned these words: “Some nations boast of their chariots and horses, but we boast in the name of the LORD our God” (Psalm 20:7). Why was David now seeking numerical figures when the Lord alone deserved his focus? David didn’t need to count on a mighty army to defeat the Lord’s battles. He knew that God had given him the victory in the fiercest of times. Like David, in our quest for more, we sometimes forget that everything we have achieved, accomplished, and yes, avoided is because of God’s mercy and power.

Fulfillment

June 4, 2017 • Dr Charles Kyker

David was a warrior with a shepherd’s heart. Because he was a strong leader, he attracted valiant men to fight the Lord’s battles. Second Samuel 23:8-39 names the “Three” and the “Thirty” –mighty men who specifically fought alongside king David in fiercest times. These verses give a few examples of their heroic feats and exploits. We must remember that although the Lord had given Israel this land, they were surrounded by enemy nations, and the threat of occupation was nearly constant.