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Christian Living

Needing a Redo. Does God allow us to start over?

There are times we all mess up and wish we could get a redo. A word we’ve spoken that we wish we could unsay. A decision we’ve made where we wish we could yell “Mulligan” and take a second shot. We wish an undo button existed.a photo of an undo button from a computer reminding us of our desire of a redo

That’s one of the reasons that I like reading about the Nazarite Vow and how God allowed for starting over – getting a redo!

The Old Testament book of Numbers gives information about the Nazarite Vow. Typically, the Nazarite Vow was a voluntary vow that a person took for a limited amount of time. During the vow, the person could not drink wine and could not be in the presence of anything dead. After the vow was completed, the person was again able to drink wine and take part in funerals.

But what if you had made a Nazarite vow, and you ended up accidentally encountering something dead before you completed the vow? What if you were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, and that caused your important vow to be broken unintentionally. What a waste! But maybe God gave a chance for a redo?

Numbers 6:9 indicates that if a person in your presence suddenly died, which would unintentionally break your Nazarite vow, that you were then to shave off your hair and start over. This new beginning allowed you another opportunity to fulfill the vow you had made to the Lord.

While we don’t still take Nazarite vows, the reason I point this out is that I am so glad God gives us the chance to start over – to get that redo! (In fact, with God we get multiple redos!)

Warren Wiersbe says it this way

“Believers today need to realize that no failure need be permanent!”

And Pastor Alexander Whyte from the 1800s said:

“The victorious Christian life is a series of new beginnings.”

photo of newly sprouted plantI’m so glad that our failures are not permanent and that God gives us new beginnings. Here’s a prayer for all of us who are grateful for redos today:

“Thank you Jesus for the chance to start over, for the truth that no failure needs to be permanent, and that each day with You is a new beginning!”

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Categories
Christian Living

Oops, I Took A Wrong Turn! Now What?

We’ve all done it…
Taken that wrong turn…
And some people have found that wrong turn to be a costly mistake…

a car that took a wrong turn into a lake
photo credit: www.komu.com/news/car-slides-off-roadway-into-lake/

Sometimes we feel as if we taken the wrong turn not just with our car, but with our entire life. We look back on the past and and we think, “Boy, did I choose the wrong way.” And we might even wonder if life has been permanently damaged because of that choice. If you feel that way, I have great news for you…

      If I found I had driven into a bog, I should know I had missed the road. But this knowledge would not be of much comfort if I then had to stand helpless watching the car sink and vanish; the damage would be done, and that would be that. Is it the same when a Christian wakes up to the fact that he has missed God’s guidance and taken the wrong way? Is the damage irrevocable? Must he now be put off course for life?
      Thank God, no. Our God is a God who not merely restores, but takes up our mistakes and follies into His plan for us and brings good out of them.
      This is part of the wonder of His gracious sovereignty…. The Jesus who restored Peter after his denial and corrected his course more than once after that, is our Savior today and He has not changed….
      Guidance, like all God’s acts of blessing under the covenant of grace, is a sovereign act. Not merely does God will to guide us in the sense of showing us His way, that we may tread it; He wills also to guide us in the more fundamental sense of ensuring that, whatever happens, whatever mistakes we may make, we shall come safely home. Slippings and strayings there will be, no doubt, but the everlasting arms are beneath us; we shall be caught, rescued, restored. This is God’s promise; this is how good He is.
      Thus it appears that the right context for discussing guidance is one of confidence in the God who will not let us ruin our souls.
      Our concern, therefore, in this discussion should be more for His glory than for our security — for that is already taken care of.

Isn’t that a beautiful description of how good God is to us. That if we have chosen Jesus as Savior and Lord, then no matter if we slip, we know that His arms are beneath us and that we will not ruin our souls. Our security in Him has been established already, so let us live for His glory!

        (Quotes in today’s post are from Knowing God by J. I. Packer)