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False Predictions & Transcendent Faith
Rev. Tony Cooke

Aren’t you glad that the experts aren’t always right!

Countless people have had negative, restricting, and potentially crushing words spoken over their lives.  Thank God that there are examples of people whose faith transcended such “death sentences.”  The great men and women of the Bible were those who rose above criticism, scorn, and nay-saying:

 

Lou Holtz, the former head coach of the Notre Dame football team said, “So what if someone wrote your obituary, that doesn't mean you are obligated to die."  Isn’t it great that no one has the final word about our identity or destiny except God and us?  Psalms 119:69 in the Message Version says, “The godless spread lies about me, but I focus my attention on what you are saying.” 

The generation that God brought out of Egypt was full of doubt, murmuring, and complaints, and they “projected” that hopelessness toward their own children.  But God had a better plan for that new generation, and He said in Numbers 14:31, “But your little ones, whom you said would be victims, I will bring in, and they shall know the land which you have despised.”  That new generation had the potential to rise above the “death sentence” that others had spoken over them.  They had the opportunity to discover and seize upon a new destiny—a better future—through God’s ability and promises. 

Perhaps you’ve had people actually attempt to de-value you through destructive words, or maybe you’ve been bombarded by thoughts from “the accuser of the brethren” (Revelation 12:10).  Either way, as Romans 8:31 says, “If God is for us, who can be against us?”  Our faith really can transcend the false predictions and toxic words of others.

 

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