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the Greatest “But” passage in the bible

"I remember my affliction and my wanderings, the wormwood and the gall! My soul continually remembers it and is bowed down within me.  But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope:   The  steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.  “The Lord is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I will hope in him.”  Lamentations 3:19-24

"It was a race against time in the mountains of Iran. After an American fighter jet was struck by enemy fire, two crew members ejected into hostile territory. One was rescued within hours. The other was a weapons systems officer who found himself alone and injured while being actively hunted.

For nearly two days, U.S. forces searched while Iranian units closed in. The airman climbed a 7,000-foot ridgeline and wedged himself into a rock crevice. He stayed completely hidden and signaled only intermittently so he would not be detected. Finally, under the cover of darkness, a massive rescue operation unfolded. Special Operations helicopters and fighter jets coordinated strikes that lit up the mountainside. The airman was battered but alive. He successfully guided rescuers from his hiding place as they extracted him under extreme danger. It went down as one of the most complex rescues in modern warfare.

What is truly remarkable about this story is that none of the airman’s actions were improvised. Long before he ever flew that mission, he had been prepared for it through an intense military survival program. Pilots in this program are dropped into simulated hostile environments like scorching deserts or freezing arctic conditions. They are taught to stay alive with almost nothing. They learn to triage wounds and build makeshift shelters. Instructors force them to find water in unlikely places and practice moving undetected at night. Every detail is drilled into them so that if the worst happens, they know exactly what to do to get home.

Preparing for spiritual warfare requires intentional action. When a crisis hits and you find yourself in hostile territory, you need deep reserves of endurance. You must prepare your heart and mind long before the battle begins. Committing to spiritual disciplines like deep meditation on Scripture and persistent prayer builds the resilience needed to survive. Actively training yourself in godliness ensures you know exactly what to do when the enemy closes in."**

Lamentations chapter three was written at perhaps the lowest moment in Israel's ancient history.  Jerusalem and the Temple were destroyed, captives taken to Babylon for a seventy-year Exile. As Jeremiah wrote his Lament, he included the most significant "but" passage in the Scriptures.  He declared amid excruciating pain and defeat that his hope was not extinguished. He counted on the character of God, on His daily extended mercy, His faithfulness,  His never-ceasing steadfast love. When life throws you and me an unexpected "curve ball," may we be so suffused and certain of God's character that our hope burns brightly in dark times.

Many years ago, my younger brother proudly showed me through the first home he and his wife purchased.  As we stood in his new garage, I placed one hand to my ear and asked, "Do you hear that?"  "What?" he replied, "I don't hear anything."  I answered "That is the sound of everything you now own deteriorating and breaking down.  Welcome to home ownership, better get ready."   To survive life, yea thrive, we dare not improvise...we must carefully prepare for what may occur.           

 Growing my hope in God for tough times, Pastor Perry Floyd 

 

Perry Floyd