Judy A Knox

Dewdrops of Grace

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Irons in the Fire

September 9, 2015

084A few summers ago my sister and I took our grandkids to Living History Farms in Iowa to see how people lived more than a hundred years ago. At the blacksmith shop, as they watched the “smithy,” one of them got to hold an iron in the fire until it turned red hot. Then the smithy pulled the iron out and hammered the hot metal into shape. When the metal cooled and became too brittle to work with, back into the fire it went.

A blacksmith working on one iron at a time, pulling it out, working on it, plunging it back in, and waiting for it to heat up again, would not accomplish much in a day. So he works on several pieces at a time, hammering on one while the others are heating. However, the metal can’t be left in the forge too long or it will lose its shape. A good blacksmith knows just how many pieces of work he can manage at a time.

That’s where we get the phrase “too many irons in the fire.” What an apt description of our lives when we try to juggle too many projects at once and end up ruining one thing while hurrying to “strike while the iron is hot” with another. We run hither and yon, taking out one task to work on, plunging another into the fire, and not doing any of them as well as we had planned to.

When I find myself in this situation, I have learned I simply must stop and ask God which irons need to be removed from the fire to save for another day – or eliminated altogether. In Mark 4:19 Jesus warns us that the cares of this world can choke the Word of God that has been planted and is trying to grow in our heart. Too many projects and activities, no matter how good they may be, will stunt our spiritual growth.

God tells us to “be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). If we don’t have time to do this, we have too many irons in the fire. I want to be like Jesus, who “has done all things well” (Mark 7:37).

I posted this several years ago, and when I ran across it recently, I realized that it is still a good word, so I am sharing it again. I hope you find it helpful.

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Between Life and Death

August 20, 2015

IMG_1113This is Banias in northern Israel. Another name for it is Caesarea Philippi, and it was one of the most thought-provoking sites we visited. The natural spring here is the primary source of water for the Jordan River. However, that is not its only significance. It was here that Jesus asked His disciples, “Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?” The story is found in Matthew 16:13-20.

During Jesus’ time there were many pagan temples here. The painting below shows how it would have looked during that time. Now all that remains is a rock wall and the floors of the temples.

No wonder Jesus chose this place to ask that question. The disciples would have seen all of the people going in and out of the temples to worship their gods and idols. There they stood between springs of living water and the worship of dead idols –between representations of life and death. There, after they told Him what other people said, He asked them the most important question of His entire ministry. “But who do you say that I am?”

This is still the most important question we must answer today: who do we say that He is? When Peter blurted out the answer. “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God,”IMG_1114 Jesus told him that God had revealed that truth to him. And it is God who reveals the same truth to us more than 2,000 years later.

When we realize who He is, we have no problem placing our trust in Him. Peter and the other disciples had only the Old Testament Scriptures, pointing forward to the coming of Messiah. How amazing it must have been to suddenly realize that they were seeing those Scriptures fulfilled right in their midst.

Today, in addition to the Old Testament, we have the four Gospels and the rest of the New Testament to reveal Jesus’ identity to us. As Paul says in Romans 1:20, we are without excuse if we do not recognize this truth, that He is the Christ, the Son of the living God.

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Judy appeared on the Andrew Wommack Ministries' Gospel Truth program. You can see the videos by following these links:

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