Like the Stars
The Fellowship | January 17, 2018
He took him outside and said, “Look up at the sky and count the stars — if indeed you can count them.” Then he said to him, “So shall your offspring be.” — Genesis 15:5
The year 2018 is important for Israel and the Jewish people as we celebrate the modern State of Israel’s 70th Birthday. You can be part of this momentous milestone with Rabbi Eckstein’s 70 devotions offered now through April 19th, Israel’s Independence Day. These devotions are tied to our Keys to Israel – six fundamental principles underlying God’s covenantal relationship with His chosen people and His Holy Land using the acrostic I.S.R.A.E.L.
This devotion is part of ten devotions focusing on the letter “I” — Important to God — and will explore Israel’s importance to God as expressed through His promise to Abraham more than 3,000 years ago.
When Abraham first began his journey, God promised him that he would become a great nation. But now in their 70s and 80s, Abraham and Sarah begin to wonder if that nation will be born from children of their own. Abraham decided, “You have given me no children; so a servant in my household will be my heir” (Genesis 15:3). Abraham concluded that the nation will be built by his close disciple, Eliezer. Perhaps the aging couple would remain childless after all.
Not so, said God. He reassured Abraham that he will have children and that his descendants will be many. How many? God told Abraham, “Look up at the sky and count the stars.” Can anyone, even with the most sophisticated technology, count all of the stars? “So shall your offspring be,” said God.
Was God just teaching Abraham about the quantity of his offspring, or was he teaching him something about their quality as well? According to the Jewish sages, the stars are an analogy not just for the number of Abraham’s descendants, but also for their nature as well.
How does a star appear in the night sky? Tiny. A mere speck of light in the vast sky. But what’s the reality? Every star is like the sun! Every tiny speck of light in the sky is really a brilliant orbit of light! If we were to get close enough, we would be blinded by their brilliance.
And that’s how we need to see the descendants of Abraham. Those who follow God may not always appear to be bright and shiny. Sometimes they might even appear rather dull and tiny. But the truth is that they are huge and brilliant up in the heavens! Some of the brightest stars in heaven look small and lowly here on Earth.
When you look at another person, especially a child, remember that he or she is like a star. He might seem small to you. It might look like she hasn’t accomplished much, or that he might not amount to anything great. But what do you really know? Can you know who shines brightly up above? Can you know who is a superstar in God’s eyes?
Try to see every person as a hidden luminary, with unknowable potential to illuminate the world. When we see people for the bright and shiny stars that they are, they may just learn to see themselves that way too.
Join the celebration and get the entire Keys to I.S.R.A.E.L. curriculum for free — for you, your small group, or even your church.