The Grands Letter (GLJ)
Gene L. Jeffries, Th.D. on July 15, 2017 7:26 am (CST)Dear Grands,
1 Samuel 30:6, “Moreover, David was greatly distressed because the people
spoke of stoning him, for all the people were embittered, each one because
of his sons and his daughters. But David strengthened himself in the LORD
his God.”
The greater the advancement, the greater the trouble. I have to wonder
if David did not often wish he were once again a youth keeping watch over
sheep in the wilderness. Life was simpler then. Not only was Saul against
him, but the Amalekites had raided Ziklag, a city in the Negev (in southern
Israel) and captured his wives and all the cattle. David and all who were
with him wept until they had no more tears. Add to all of that, the people
who were with him, and had wept with him over the devastation of the
circumstances, now turned against him and talked about stoning him to
death. Sometimes the appearance of a thing is worse than the reality. But
when things are really devastating, we often don’t see beyond the trouble.
What, then, are we to do? What did David do? He “strengthened himself
in the LORD his God.” He got a grip on himself and refused to be discouraged!
I will not give up! I am the LORD’s servant; I will depend on Him! It was an
attitude thing. He took his problems to the LORD, and the LORD assured
him that all would be well. In the end, all was well, as David “recovered
all that the Amalekites had taken, and rescued his two wives (v. 18).
Life is not a bed of roses. Troubles will always surround and threaten us.
But the LORD is our “refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble”
(Psa. 46:1). Learn to trust and rely on Him.
Our love and prayers surround you daily,
Nana & Dado III
Gene L. Jeffries, Th.D.
Springdale, Arkansas
“We never know that God is all we need
until He becomes all that we have.”