Ready or Not, Here I Come
When we are focused on the right treasure, we will be ready to harvest the reward
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Ready or Not, Here I Come
Ready or Not, Here I Come
A. Fear Not (v 32)
A. Fear Not (v 32)
A. Fear Not (v 32)
B. True Treasure (v 33-34)
C. Be Ready (v 35-40)
Parable of the Watchful Servant,
1) The servants need to be ready and expectant to receive the master of the house when he returns.
Step 1 - Betrothal: This occurred when the prospective groom traveled to the home of the prospective bride to pay the purchase price establishing a marriage covenant.
2) The master is so delighted over the faithfulness of his servants that he in turns serves them.
Step 2 - The groom returns to his father’s house for 12 months to prepare the living accommodations for his bride to live in his father’s house.
Parable of the Absent Homeowner,
Pony Express
When it comes to being on the alert and ready at any moment to do the job, it’s hard to beat the Pony Express. This historically famous mail service between St. Joseph, Missouri, and California depended on constant movement and readiness. Relay stations were established every ten to fifteen miles. A rider would shout aloud as he approached a station, giving the station master very short notice that he needed to be outside waiting with a fresh mount. Even when a rider came to the station where he was to spend the night, another rider was already mounted and waiting, ready to grab the first rider’s bundle of packages and continue the trip.
The completion of the transcontinental telegraph system rendered the Pony Express obsolete after just eighteen months. But we have this service’s intriguing example of what it means to be ever watchful,. Jesus used two parables to teach us the value of readiness and watchfulness as His servants.
Today in the Word, December, 1997, p. 17