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The day [is] Yours, the night also [is] Yours; You have prepared the light and the sun. Psalm 74:16 NKJV
Most of us, at some point in childhood, are afraid of the dark. Part of “growing up” is shedding that particular fear.
But even men can dread the nighttime—not for presumed monsters under the bed but for the frightening things that inhabit our own minds. Minus the distractions of the day’s activity, we might worry over career and finances, our marriage or kids, the state of the world, or any of a million other topics that disrupt sleep. What’s a guy to do?
Psalm 74 offers both sympathy and hope. Clearly referencing the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem, the psalm writer spends the first eleven verses bemoaning God’s anger and seeming rejection of His people. Bad people were oppressing God’s people, and the Lord was allowing it to happen.
But then the psalm writer changed his mindset entirely. “God is my King of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth,” he wrote (v.12). The Lord possessed enough power to divide seas, dry up rivers, and break open fountains, all to help His people. There would be times of darkness, as today’s scripture indicates…but God is always preparing light and sun to follow.
Every night gives way to day. This is God’s plan, in both the natural and spiritual realm.
Prayer: Father, allay my fears and remind me that Your day is coming.
Most of us, at some point in childhood, are afraid of the dark. Part of “growing up” is shedding that particular fear.
But even men can dread the nighttime—not for presumed monsters under the bed but for the frightening things that inhabit our own minds. Minus the distractions of the day’s activity, we might worry over career and finances, our marriage or kids, the state of the world, or any of a million other topics that disrupt sleep. What’s a guy to do?
Psalm 74 offers both sympathy and hope. Clearly referencing the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem, the psalm writer spends the first eleven verses bemoaning God’s anger and seeming rejection of His people. Bad people were oppressing God’s people, and the Lord was allowing it to happen.
But then the psalm writer changed his mindset entirely. “God is my King of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth,” he wrote (v.12). The Lord possessed enough power to divide seas, dry up rivers, and break open fountains, all to help His people. There would be times of darkness, as today’s scripture indicates…but God is always preparing light and sun to follow.
Every night gives way to day. This is God’s plan, in both the natural and spiritual realm.
Prayer: Father, allay my fears and remind me that Your day is coming.
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