Paul and
Barnabas were preaching the Good News of Christ in the city of Lystra. In their
audience was "a man crippled in his feet, who was lame from birth and
had never walked" (Acts 14: 8). Paul was used by our Lord to heal this
man.
The crowds
were excited and surprised by this miracle. They proclaimed Paul and Barnabas
to be the Greek gods Hermes and Zeus – for who but the gods could do such a
wondrous thing as heal a man lame since birth, they thought!
How many
times do we, like the people of Lystra, thank the wrong person? We do that
every time we give any human, including ourselves, credit instead of thanking
God for his blessings.
Paul then
states that the healing of the lame man points to the only living God. He tells
the crowd that the healing of the lame man is only one testimony among many to
the one and only true God. The
healing of the lame man, just as the making of the vast Creation (Acts 14:15) –
as well as the revelation of Jesus Christ, point to God only. When the
people of Lystra heard the Gospel and saw the healing of the lame man and saw
God’s works in the vast Creation, they should have "turned to the
living God" with gratefulness and in faith. (vs 15 - 18). So often we give credit to humans, ministers,
leaders, those who make the news, when we should be om our knees before God in
humble gratitude!
We never have
to fear that God will forget to provide in the smallest detail of our lives.
What we must fear is that human pride and worldly thinking might get in God’s
way.
More
importantly, what we must fear is that we do not give ourselves back to God in
gratefulness and love, because we fail to see his mercies and wonders.
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