What does the Bible say about Jehovah-jireh?
Jehovah-jireh, meaning 'the Lord will provide,' signifies God's provision as seen in Genesis 22:14.
The importance of recalling our own Jehovah-jirehs—times when God has graciously provided—is to bolster our faith in future trials. As believers, we are encouraged to remember and recount how the Lord has helped us previously, allowing those experiences to reinforce our trust that He will continue to provide. This exercise of faith helps us to avoid doubt and despair, reinforcing that just as the Lord has provided in the past, He remains all-sufficient for our present and future needs.
Genesis 22:14
How do we know God's provision is true?
God's provision is evidenced throughout Scripture, particularly in Abraham's experience in Genesis 22:14.
Moreover, the ongoing legacy of Jehovah-jireh extends beyond Abraham, as the Scriptures invite all generations to witness and trust in God's provision. Each time believers reflect on their lives, recalling moments of divine intervention, they reaffirm the truth that God is consistently faithful to His word. These testimonies foster confidence in His unchangeable nature, reinforcing that He will provide for all our needs, both spiritually and materially.
Genesis 22:14
Why is remembering Jehovah-jireh important for Christians?
Remembering Jehovah-jireh establishes a foundation of faith that encourages trust in God's future provisions.
Furthermore, these remembrances serve as spiritual milestones, reminding us that God has been active in our lives, just as He was with Abraham. This continuity fosters a deep-seated assurance that God's character remains unchanged; He is still the God who provides. Thus, we can face future challenges with the confidence that if He has helped us in the past, He will surely do so again. It also encourages others in the faith, as they hear our testimonies of provision amidst trials, reflecting the truth that in the mount of the Lord, provision will undoubtedly be seen.
Genesis 22:14
"And Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah-jireh; as it is said to this day, in the mount of the Lord it shall be seen."—Gen. xxii. 14.
— Genesis 22:14
My soul! how many Jehovah-jirehs hast thou erected? At least, how many occasions hath thy bountiful Lord afforded thee for erecting them? Oh what cause have I to blush in the recollection! Had I done by my God, as Abraham did by his, what blessed helps would they have afforded me, in the same moment that they became monuments to the Lord's praise! Surely I know all this, in theory, very plainly and fully: but how do I fall short in the practice of it! To set up the Jehovah-jireh for all that is past, is the best help to a soul in exercises for all that is to come. When I can, and do put down, after any sharp trial, any Jehovah-jireh, and say, here it was "the Lord did provide;" will it not, in any future exercise, enable me to say, 'If the Lord helped me then, may I not hope that he will help me now?' It would be a very sad requital for past mercies, in the moment of receiving them, to say, 'Alas! the Lord did once help, but he will not. I fear, do it again.' This would be to read the inscription of the Jehovah-jireh backward. Whereas the very sight of our Jehovah-jirehs should teach us to say, "Here the Lord helped me: here he manifested his free unmerited grace to me: and will he not again? Is he less Jehovah than he was? Is he not God all-sufficient, all-gracious still?" O it is blessed to have such stones set up as Abraham's Jehovah-jireh. There was nothing in the patriarch's of his own providing. His was simply an act of faith; and neither the result of his asking by prayer, or providing by his wisdom. And, my soul, do not overlook a most interesting mark which the Holy Ghost hath put upon Abraham's Jehovah-jireh, in adding, "As it is said to this day, in the mount of the Lord it shall be seen." As if he had said, ' all the ages and generations yet to come shall profit by the great father of the faithful's testimony to this place; and they shall see it to the latest day of Jesus's church upon earth? Oh! how blessed, when our personal experience bears an exact correspondence to that of the faithful gone before; when we can and do set up the same. All blessings, all provisions are in Jesus. He is the Lamb, which, from everlasting, Jehovah hath provided, and whom his people shall see in all their wants, temporal, spiritual, and eternal. And let their extremities be what they may, yea, though the exercises of their faith abound, yet let them wait but the Lord's time, which is always the best time, and they shall most assuredly, like Abraham, find cause to call the name of every place of trial, Jehovah-jireh; concerning which, in proof and in reality it shall be said, every day and to the last day," In the mount of the Lord it shall be seen!"
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