Ammonites

Assuming Motives

David has what might today be described as a “peace treaty” with the Ammonites and their king Nahash, and when Nahash died, David sent some ambassadors to the new king of the Ammonites; his son Hanun. But Hanun listening to the nattering of his commanders who managed to convince him that David was not seeking to extend the peace treaty, but rather that these men were spies. As a result, the ambassadors were shamed and embarrassed and sent on their way. This resulted in a military response from Israel and the subjugation of the Ammonites to Israel as servants.

So then, rather than get the blessing of peace and whatever else might have arisen from the relationship with God’s chosen nation, the Ammonites got less than nothing. They got punishment. What are you missing out on because you have made assumptions about motives? How are you cheating yourself by listening to the idle chatter and gossip of the embarrassingly uninformed rather than seeking the Lord for His guidance and wisdom?

Don’t assume facts not in evidence. Trust the Lord and allow people to show you who they are. This isn’t a call to being foolish or reckless, but give people space to show you who they are before you make decisions. Just yesterday at a Calvary Global Network retreat one of the other pastors shared the following verse. And I’ll end with this today:

To answer before listening—
    that is folly and shame.

Proverbs 18:13, NIV
2 Samuel 8:15-10:19; 1 Chronicles 6:16-48, 50-53, 18:14-17, 19:1-19 | 115/365

That IS The Punishment, Dude

Today’s devotional is a quick one. The cycle of Judges is that Israel does evil, God punishes Israel, Israel cries out, God raises up a Judge, the Judge delivers Israel, Israel does evil. In this particular example we are looking at the Ammonites. But what I found frankly kind of hilarious is when they call out to God to save them from the oppression that are under, He replies, “Why don’t you ask your new BFF god to save you?”.

[fire emoji]

And they reply, “punish us tomorrow, but save us today!” Not realizing the amazing irony that what they were experiencing WAS the punishment God was visiting on them for their perpetual disobedience!

Here’s the thing: we look at bad circumstances as God abandoning us. But God will never abandon us. He will let us have the desire of our hearts so that we can see how it actually HURTS us rather than helping us. But that is done in order to bring repentance. Whatever circumstance you are in, make sure you are open to the Holy Spirit and allowing God to do His good work in you. Gold is refined in fire, not a warm blanket.

Judges 9:22-11:28 | 093/365