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God saved me from death[a]

116 I love the Lord,
    because he heard me when I called to him.
He listened carefully to me.
When I need help, I will always pray to him,
    for as long as I live.

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Footnotes

  1. 116:1 This psalm is the fourth of the 6 Egyptian ‘Hallel’ psalms (113—118). This psalm is about one man's trouble. God saved him when he thought that he would die. Verses 5-7 tell us about God. He loves people, and he is kind and good to them. He gives them help when they need it. Verses 12-18 tell us what the writer promises to do. He asks what he can give to God to say ‘thank you.’ He says that he will make an offering to God when he meets with all the people at the temple in Jerusalem. He wants all the people to know that God has been very kind to him.

12 The Lord has done many kind things to help me.
    What can I give back to him?
13 I will offer a cup of wine to the Lord,
    to thank him because he saved me!
I will worship him.
14 I will give to the Lord
    everything that I have promised.
I will do that when all his people meet together.
15 The Lord is sad when one of his servants dies,
    because their lives are valuable to him.
16 Lord, I really am your servant.
    I am like a slave in your house.
You have saved me from death.
17 I will offer to you a special sacrifice to say ‘thank you’.
    I will worship you as Lord.
18 I will give to the Lord
    everything that I have promised.
I will do that when all his people meet together,
19 in the yard of the Lord's temple.
Yes, I will worship you in your temple in Jerusalem.
Hallelujah! Praise the Lord!

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A wife for Isaac

24 Abraham was now a very old man. The Lord had blessed him in every way. Abraham had an important servant in his house. He had authority over everything that belonged to Abraham. Abraham said to him, ‘Come here and make a promise to me. Put your hand between my legs to show that I can trust you.[a] You must make a serious promise to me in front of the Lord. He is the God who rules both heaven and earth. I am living among the Canaanite people, but you must promise this to me: Do not get a Canaanite woman to be a wife for my son. Instead, you must go to my own country. Go to my family there to find a wife for my son Isaac.’

The servant asked Abraham, ‘What should I do if the woman will not agree? Maybe she will not come back with me to this land? Must I then take your son to the country that you came from?’

Abraham replied, ‘No! You must never take my son back there. The Lord, the God of heaven, took me away from there. He took me out of my father's house. He took me away from the land where my family lives. God made a serious promise to me. He said, “I will give this land to your descendants.” Because God has promised this, he will send his angel to go in front of you. When you arrive there, you will find a woman to marry my son. But perhaps the woman will not agree to come back here with you. If that happens, you do not have to keep this promise. But do not take my son back to that land.’ So the servant put his hand between Abraham's legs. The servant promised that he would do everything that Abraham had told him.

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Footnotes

  1. 24:2 At that time, the people used this practice. It showed that a person was making a serious promise to another person.

35 Then Stephen said, ‘Moses is the man that the people of Israel would not accept. They had said to him, “You have no authority to rule us. You are not our judge.” But God did send Moses to rule them. God himself sent Moses to save them from the Egyptians. God spoke to Moses through the angel that appeared to him in the bush. 36 So it was Moses who led the people of Israel out of Egypt. He did some powerful things before the people left Egypt. This showed that God was with him. He did more miracles at the Red Sea. Then he led the people through the wilderness for 40 years. He also did more miracles there.[a]

37 It was Moses who said to the people of Israel, “God will send you a prophet. He will be one of your own people. He will speak God's message as I have done.” 38 This is the same Moses who was leader of our people in the wilderness. He was there with our ancestors when the angel spoke to him on Sinai mountain. He received the message from God to give to us. Those words from God bring life to us.

39 But our ancestors would not obey Moses. They did not accept him as their leader. They wanted to go back to Egypt. 40 So the people said to Aaron, “Please make us some gods that we can carry in front of us. Yes, that man Moses brought us out of Egypt. But now we do not know what has happened to him.”[b]

41 It was then that the people made something that would be an idol for them. They made it from gold with the shape of a young bull. They killed some animals and they burned them as a gift for their idol. The people then had a big meal together because they were very happy. They thought that they had made something that was very good.[c]

42 But God turned away from his people. He let them do what they wanted to do. He let them worship the stars in the sky.

One of God's prophets wrote about this long ago:

    “God said, ‘People of Israel, listen!
    When you were in the wilderness for 40 years,
    you brought sacrifices and gifts to me.
    But you did not really worship me when you did that.
43 No. You carried with you the idol of the god called Molech.
    You also carried an idol with the shape of a star,
    to be like your god, Rephan.
    These were the idols which you worshipped in the wilderness.
    So now I will send you away from your own country.
    You will go to live in places beyond Babylon.’ ”[d]

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Footnotes

  1. 7:36 We can read about this in Exodus 7—17.
  2. 7:40 Aaron was the brother of Moses.
  3. 7:41 We can read about this in Exodus 32:1-6.
  4. 7:43 We can read this in Amos 5:25-27. Amos was speaking a message from God.