IN THE DRY SEASONS OF LIFE (1 OF 3)
by William Wyne
Scripture: I Kings 17:7-9, I Kings 17:12, I Kings 17:14-15
This content is part of a series.
In the Dry Seasons of Life (1 of 3)
Series: Trusting God
William Wyne
I Kings 17:7-9, 12, 14-15 (NIV)
In Ecclesiastes chapter 3 and verse one, the writer Solomon pens the line saying:
To everything, there is a season and a time to every purpose under the heaven (KJV).
Everything on earth has its own time and its seasons. (Contemporary English).
Then he began to identify the various seasons of life in the next verses and several others.
There is a season (or a time) to be born and a time to die, a season when we mourn, and a season when we dance, a season when we plant and a season when we pluck up what was planted, a season to give, and a season to get, a season to weep and a season to laugh.
Life has its seasons, and there are some seasons that will give you no indications that it's going to change. Some seasons of life are acute, some are gradual, and some can be chronically continuous.
Life has its seasons, and there are seasons of dry spells, it's a season of personal drought and famine. Not a physical famine or drought, but a life of dryness. It's sometimes can be a thirst for something, and yet you drink from the cisterns of life only to still be thirsty. You drink from that which you think will make you happy and bring you joy, only to find out you are not.
But the seasons of life can be when:
- There is more chaos than calmness
- More trials than triumphs
- More struggles than strengths
- More darkness than the dawn
- More speculations than surety
- More, Oh God what's next, than Oh God thank you.
- Life has its season, its dry spells, its daily famine when it just seems that things are going from bad to worse.
What do you do when you find yourself in your personal and private season of dried brooks, and the absence of your raven that seems to have misplaced your address?
Where do you go when your Brook is dry, and your Raven is on some hiatus? The Brook symbolizes the place of refreshment, refilling and refueling ...
Series: Trusting God
William Wyne
I Kings 17:7-9, 12, 14-15 (NIV)
In Ecclesiastes chapter 3 and verse one, the writer Solomon pens the line saying:
To everything, there is a season and a time to every purpose under the heaven (KJV).
Everything on earth has its own time and its seasons. (Contemporary English).
Then he began to identify the various seasons of life in the next verses and several others.
There is a season (or a time) to be born and a time to die, a season when we mourn, and a season when we dance, a season when we plant and a season when we pluck up what was planted, a season to give, and a season to get, a season to weep and a season to laugh.
Life has its seasons, and there are some seasons that will give you no indications that it's going to change. Some seasons of life are acute, some are gradual, and some can be chronically continuous.
Life has its seasons, and there are seasons of dry spells, it's a season of personal drought and famine. Not a physical famine or drought, but a life of dryness. It's sometimes can be a thirst for something, and yet you drink from the cisterns of life only to still be thirsty. You drink from that which you think will make you happy and bring you joy, only to find out you are not.
But the seasons of life can be when:
- There is more chaos than calmness
- More trials than triumphs
- More struggles than strengths
- More darkness than the dawn
- More speculations than surety
- More, Oh God what's next, than Oh God thank you.
- Life has its season, its dry spells, its daily famine when it just seems that things are going from bad to worse.
What do you do when you find yourself in your personal and private season of dried brooks, and the absence of your raven that seems to have misplaced your address?
Where do you go when your Brook is dry, and your Raven is on some hiatus? The Brook symbolizes the place of refreshment, refilling and refueling ...
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