8.30- Silent Helper
8.30-
Silent
Helper Isaiah
5 Julie Ackerman
Link
The discovery of penicillin revolutionized
health care. Prior to the 1940s bacterial infections were often fatal. Since
then, penicillin has saved countless lives by killing harmful bacteria. The men
who recognized its potential and developed it for widespread use won a Nobel
Prize in 1945.
Long before the discovery of penicillin,
other silent killers were at work saving lives by destroying bacteria. These
silent killers are white blood cells. These hard workers are God’s way of protecting
us from disease. No one knows how many invasions they have stopped or how many
lives they have saved. They receive little recognition for all the good they
do.
The Lord gets similar treatment. He often
gets blamed when something goes wrong, but He seldom gets credit for all the
things that go right. Every day people get up, get dressed, drive to work or
school or the grocery store, and return safely to their families. No one knows
how many times God has protected us from harm. But when there is a tragedy, we
ask, “Where was God?”
When I consider all the wonderful things
that God does silently on my behalf each day (Isaiah 25:1), I see that my list
of praises is much longer than my list of petitions.
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