LifeLink Devotions for Friday, December 12, 2025
Ted Koppel, in a speech to the International Radio and Television Society, said this:
“What is largely missing in American life today is a sense of context, of saying or doing anything that is intended or even expected to live beyond the moment. There is no culture in the world that is so obsessed as ours with immediacy. In our journalism, the trivial displaces the momentous because we tend to measure the importance of events by how recently they happened. We have become so obsessed with facts that we have lost all touch with truth.”
Guilty. In varying degrees we all are. We have succumbed to the Satanic deception that there is no bigger picture. We cannot see that we are playing bit parts in an eternal plan of an Almighty God. Instead, we see only the drama of our current situation.
The prophecies concerning Jesus in the Bible proclaim the bigger picture. Today’s prophecy of the coming Messiah is found in Isaiah chapter nine verse two. “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of deatha light has dawned.”
The context of the cultural era in which this was given by God is found in the Isaiah chapter eight where Isaiah is declaring his trust in the God of the bigger picture. Isaiah describes the consequences waiting for people that live for the immediate. Distress. Anger. Despair. Hopelessness. The pursuit of the immediate with no faith in the truth of a bigger picture leaves us wondering and wandering.
Maybe it’s already happened where you live.
But chapter nine begins this way.
“Nevertheless, there will be no more gloom for those who were in distress. In the past he humbled the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, but in the future he will honor Galilee of the Gentiles, by the way of the sea, along the Jordan—The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of deatha light has dawned.”
I love that word nevertheless. It proclaims hope. True hope. What do I mean by that? Well, true hope does not depend upon my activity. Real hope does not consider the failure of my past but the grace of my God. It is incredible to see in this passage that there are no requirements placed upon people for earning their freedom. The burden of self-fulfillment and self-accomplishment is removed by God’s free gift. The darkness of despair in the shadow of death is dispelled by the Light of the Lord’s love in Jesus.
When mankind was incapable of change, at just the right time in history, God sent to us a gift we did not deserve and could never afford. His love for us conquered our rebellion against Him when Jesus came to save us from the sin that had overwhelmed us.
That’s incredible! I have found the Light! Now I can see the bigger picture, and it has brought me peace.
Pastor John
