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Daily Bread

The work of our hands

The Philippine Star

Because you have forgotten the God of your salvation, …the harvest will be a heap of ruins. — Isaiah 17:10-11                                      

Spring had just turned into summer and crops were beginning to produce fruit as our train rolled across the fertile landscape of West Michigan’s shoreline. Strawberries had ripened, and people were kneeling in the morning dew to pick the sweet fruit. Blueberry bushes were soaking up sunshine from the sky and nutrients from the earth.

After passing field after field of ripening fruit, we came to a rusty pile of abandoned metal. The harsh image of orange scrap metal poking out of the earth was a sharp contrast to the soft greens of growing crops. The metal produces nothing. Fruit, on the other hand, grows, ripens, and nourishes hungry humans.

The contrast between the fruit and the metal reminds me of God’s prophecies against ancient cities like Damascus (Isa. 17:1,11). He says, “Because you have forgotten the God of your salvation, …the harvest will be a heap of ruins” (vv.10-11). This prophecy serves as a contemporary warning about the danger of futility of thinking we can produce anything on our own. Apart from God, the work of our hands will become a pile of ruins. But when we join with God in the work of His hands, God multiplies our effort and provides spiritual nourishment for many. — Julie Ackerman Link

Lord, I want to be a part of what You are doing in Your world. Apart from You, my work is nothing. Led me, fill me, use me. Nourish others through me.

READ: Isaiah 17:7-11

Without Me you can do nothing. — Jesus  (John 15:5)

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